You work as a senior administrator at ABC.com. The ABC.com network consists of a single
domain named ABC.com. All servers on the ABC.com network have Windows Server 2012 R2
installed.
You are running a training exercise for junior administrators. You are currently discussing Group
Policy preference.
Which of the following is TRUE with regards to Group Policy preference?
A.
It supports applications and operating system features that are not compatible with Group
Policy
B.
It does not support item-level targeting.
C.
It is the same as Group Policy filtering.
D.
It does not cause the application or operating system feature to disable the user interface for
the settings they configure.
Explanation:
The Answer is only A.
And there is one choose in that Q.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc731892(v=ws.10).aspx
Liron, D is also correct. User can change config when it given by Preference. But it resets automatically on next update or restart…
Examples of the new Group Policy preference extensions include folder options, mapped drives, printers, scheduled tasks, services, and Start menu settings.
Group Policy preferences provide better targeting, through item-level targeting and action modes. Additionally, rich user interfaces and standards-based XML configurations provide you with more power and flexibility over managed computers when you administer GPOs.
In addition to providing significantly more coverage, better targeting, and easier management, Group Policy preferences enable you to deploy settings to client computers without restricting the users from changing the settings. This capability provides you with the flexibility to decide which settings to enforce and which settings to not enforce. You can deploy settings that you do not want to enforce by using Group Policy preferences.
to me it’s only D
in GPO preferences allows for examples to map network share ,and user can decide to disconnect .
Anyway A is it correct for some reason ?
D: is correct
Preference settings are administrative configuration choices deployed to desktops and servers. Preference settings differ from policy settings because users have a choice to alter the administrative configuration.
C: is not correct see below so they are not the same.
Policy settings administratively enforce setting, which restricts user choice.