I passed Enterprise today. It wasn't as difficult at I thought it would be.
I used the T**** tests which were a big help, the Exam Cram book for
Enterprise, again a big help, and Scholars.com for my primary learning. To
pass the test you must know trusts forward and backward, as well as the
purposes and proper configuration of DHCP, WINS, DNS, Hosts, and LMHosts.
Many of the test questions were very similar to what I saw on Workstation
and Server. Especially Performance Monitor questions. The questions
regarding Perfmon wanted you to know which counters you should monitor to
figure out if a server is a chokepoint due to too many disk accesses.
Monitor the logical disk counter in that scenario. Know that adding RAM to
a PDC or BDC is not the proper solution if network activity causes poor
performance during peak logon periods (ie the morning and after lunch).
Instead, add additional BDCs. There were a bunch of Fault tolerance
questions which were very easy if you simply remember that only Stripe Sets
with Parity, Disk Mirroring, and Disk Duplexing provide fault tolerance with
NTServer 4.0. Additionally, Theses forms of fault tolerance are only good
if a single disk goes bad. Otherwise, you have to replace the disks and
reload from a tape backup. The test may try and trick you by making two of
the disks bad and then offering as solutions valid options if only one disk
goes bad. Be careful. Similar to WS and Server, you must know your NTFS
Permissions well to pass. As a rule of thumb which has worked for me, if
you can score in the upper 900s on the T**** tests AND AND AND AND be able
to understand the explanations of why the correct answer is correct, you
will be able to pass the real thing.