You have a computer that runs Windows 7. Your company has a corporate intranet Web site. You open Windows Internet Explorer as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.) You need to ensure that you can access Web pages on both the Internet and the intranet. What should you do?
A.
From the Files menu, click Work Offline.
B.
From the Safety menu, click InPrivate Filtering.
C.
From the Safety menu, click InPrivate Browsing.
D.
From the Security tab, add the intranet Web site to the Trusted sites zone.
Explanation:
Working Offline is activated
On Internet Explorer’s File menu is a “Work Offline” item that toggles Internet Explorer between online and offline modes of operation.
(The question originally stated the Tools menu, maybe in a different version of IE this is the case, but for me and in the TechNet documentation it was under Files, so I’m choosing to believe Tools was a mistake and it should be Files, this has been amended in the question).
InPrivate is turned on (does not prevent browsing the internet)
InPrivate Browsing helps prevent Internet Explorer from storing data about your browsing session. This includes cookies, temporary Internet files, history, and other data. Toolbars and extensions are disabled by default.
Nonsense. The exhibit shows IE is already working offline and InPrivate. To ensure you are able to “access” both Intranet and Internet WEB sites, GO ONLINE otherwise you are looking at cached, offline web page content.
Bruce, the ‘Work Offline’ is a toggle option and since the exhibit shows that IE is already working offline, selecting this option would set the browser to online. So the answer A is correct.
As suggested by the explanation, selecting “Work Offline” toggles the offline mode on or off.
Given that the IE in the exhibit is already offline, clicking “Work Offline” toggles the offline mode off and the browser is able to access both the Internet and the intranet.