MCSE MCITP RHCE CCNA Training

  • Do you want to become MCSE /CCNA ?
     
  • Do you want to finish in 2/3 weeks?

 




 
 

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator - Windows Server 2008 Training | MCITP: Enterprise Administrator - Windows Server 2008 Boot Camp | MCITP: Enterprise Administrator - Windows Server 2008 Training Course
RHCE/RHCT Training | RHCE/RHCT Certification | RHCE/RHCT Training Course
RHCE/RHCT Training, RHCE/RHCT Certification, RHCE/RHCT Training Course, RHCE/RHCT Training India, RHCE/RHCT Training Mumbai, RHCE/RHCT Training Andheri, RHCE/RHCT Training Bombay, RHCE/RHCT Training Mumbai Andheri, Red Hat RHCE/RHCT Training Certification.
RHCE/RHCT Exam, RHCE/RHCT Certification, RHCE/RHCT Training Course, RHCE/RHCT Exam India, RHCE/RHCT Exam Mumbai, RHCE/RHCT Exam Andheri, RHCE/RHCT Exam western india, RHCE/RHCT Exam bombay, Red Hat RHCE/RHCT Training Certification.


MCITP: Enterprise Administrator Certification Training Windows Server 2008

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator is the equivalent of MCSE for Windows Server 2008.

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator training boot camp validates your ability to:

  • Design Windows Server infrastructures, evaluate and recommend new technology solutions

  • Serve as an escalation point for infrastructure issues

  • Develop client and server best practices for other teams, such as engineering, development, and operations

  • Keep policy current for authentication, identity, and access management

  • Provide guidance in implementing security policies that affect the infrastructure on multiple levels

  • Participate in application reviews on security and

  • Ensure that the applications adhere to standard security guidelines and practices.

 

MCSE Boot Camp, CCNA Bootcamp, CCNP Boot camp training in UK, USA, JAPAN, India
CCNA Training, MCSE Training, A+ Certification, MCSA, CCNP, Network+, Security+, CISSP, MCSD, CCSP,

MCSE CCNA CCNP boot camp, #1 Bootcamp Training Institute in UK, USA

 

MCSE Boot Camp, CCNA Bootcamps, CCNP Boot camp Certification Training

MCSE Guide

Free MCSE
Free MCSE Training
MCSE
MCSE 2003
MCSE Books
MCSE Boot Camp
MCSE Brain dumps
MCSE Certification
MCSE Exam
MCSE Free
MCSE Jobs
MCSE Logo
MCSE Online
MCSE Online Training
MCSE Practice
MCSE Practice Exams
MCSE Practice Tests
MCSE Requirements
MCSE Resume
MCSE Salary
MCSE Self Paced Training Kit
MCSE Study
MCSE Study Guide
MCSE Study Guides
MCSE Test
MCSE Testing
MCSE Training
MCSE Training Kit
MCSE Training Video
MCSE Windows 2003
Microsoft MCSE Training
Training MCSE
Windows 2003 MCSE

 

 

Terms

Here are some basic terms you need to be familiar with before drilling down into Group Policy:

Local policy - Refers to the policy that configures the local computer or server, and is not inherited from the domain. You can set local policy by running gpedit.msc from the Run command, or you can add "Group Policy Object Editor" snap-in to MMC. Local Policies also exist in the Active Directory environment, but have many fewer configuration options that the full-fledged Group Policy in AD.

GPO - Group Policy Object - Refers to the policy that is configured at the Active Directory level and is inherited by the domain member computers. You can configure a GPO – Group Policy Object - at the site level, domain level or OU level.

GPC – Group Policy Container - The GPC is the store of the GPOs; The GPC is where the GPO stores all the AD-related configuration. Any GPO that is created is not effective until it is linked to an OU, Domain or a Site. The GPOs are replicated among the Domain Controllers of the Domain through replication of the Active Directory.

GPT - Group Policy Templates - The GPT is where the GPO stores the actual settings. The GPT is located within the Netlogon share on the DCs.

Netlogon share - A share located only on Domain Controllers and contains GPOs, scripts and .POL files for policy of Windows NT/98. The Netlogon share replicates among all DCs in the Domain, and is accessible for read only for the Everyone group, and Full Control for the Domain Admins group. The Netlogon's real location is:

C:\WINDOWS\SYSVOL\sysvol\domain.com\SCRIPTS

When a domain member computer boots up, it finds the DC and looks for the Netlogon share in it.

To see what DC the computer used when it booted, you can go to the Run command and type %logonserver%\Netlogon. The content of the Netlogon share should be the same on all DCs in the domain.