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MCSE : Security Specialist

GET CERTIFIED IN JUST 18 DAYS - 2003 PATH

Our 18 day accelerated MCSE 2003: Security+ Training BootCamp provides information technology professionals with the knowledge and skills necessary to install, configure, support, and troubleshoot Microsoft® Windows 2000- and 2003-based networks with a focus on information security in the enterprise. This is an accelerated course, designed for computer professionals that require effective, real-world skill-building and timely certification.

Now Available MCSE Certification Training

The MCSE 2003: Security+ Boot Camp delivers the greatest value on the market for Windows 2003 Certification Training. During the program, students will achieve the following certifications:

  • Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP)
  • Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator (MCSA)
  • CompTIA Security+
  • Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE) 

Call About Onsite Courses at your location

  • Course Schedule
  • Curriculum

Microsoft MCSE MCSA Certification Training Boot Camp Class Course

The MCSE Boot Camp is unlike any other.  With our  class, you will learn more.

Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Accelerated Certification Program is the most effective, efficient way to learn how to successfully design, plan, and implement a network infrastructure, Active Directory® infrastructure, and client deployment on the Windows Server 2003 platform. 

Daily lectures, labs, and review sessions are supplemented by a combination of:

  • Proprietary Lab Manual & Microsoft Courseware - developed in conjunction with Microsoft, adapting Microsoft Official Curriculum to address the demands of accelerated learners
  • Authorized CompTIA Security+ Lab Manual & Courseware
  • Self Test™ or Transcender® Testing Software

A group is a collection of user accounts. You can assign access permission to all members of a group at one time, so that you do not need to assign the permissions individually. After you provide access to a group, you can simply  add appropriate users to that group. You can use the default, or built-in, groups that Windows 2003 provides, or you can create new groups to meet your organization’s needs. A group can exist on a local computer only, on computers within a single domain, or on computers across multiple domains.

 

Groups on a Local Computer

On local computers (computers that are not domain controllers), you can create only local groups in the local security database. A group located on a computer that is not a domain controller provides security and access for the local computer only. For example, to grant administrative permissions on a local computer to a user, you add the user to the Administrators group on that computer by using the Local Users and Groups utility.

 

Groups on a Domain Controller

On a domain controller, you create groups in Active Directory. A group that exists on a domain controller can include users throughout the entire domain or across multiple domains. For example, to provide users with administrative privileges, you add them to the Administrators group on a domain controller by using the Active Directory Users and Computers utility.

 

 

User Rights

 

Rights apply to the entire system, rather than to a specific resource, and affect the overall operation of the computer or domain. All users accessing network resources need to have certain common rights on the computers they use, such as the right to log on to the computer or change the system time of the computer. Administrators can grant specific common user rights to user groups or to individual users. Additionally, Windows 2003 grants certain rights to built-in groups by default. User rights determine which users can perform a specific task on a computer or in a domain.