You work as a desktop support technician at Domain.com. The Domain.com network consists of a single Active Directory domain named Domain.com. All servers on the Domain.com network run Windows 2000 Server and all client computers run Windows XP Professional.
Domain.com consists of four departments named Sales, Marketing, Finance, and Legal. The users in each department are organized into groups based on the department name. You use a client computer named Certkiller -WS270. An HP desk jet printer named hp_dj is attached to Certkiller -WS270. Several Domain.com departments print to the HP desk jet printer attached to Certkiller -WS270. Most Domain.com users print short documents while users in the Finance department often print large documents that require legal-size paper.
When tray for the legal-size paper is empty, all submitted print jobs are paused.
You want to ensure that all print jobs are not paused when the legal-size paper tray is empty. You create another printer named hp_dj2 for the same HP desk jet device.
What should you do next? (Each correct option presents part of the answer. Choose three.)
A.
Assign the Sales, Marketing, and Finance groups the Allow – Print permission for the hp_dj2 printer.
B.
Assign a print priority of 99 to the hp_dj printer.
C.
Assign a print priority of 50 for the hp_dj printer.
D.
Assign a print priority of 60 to the hp_dj2 printer.
E.
Assign a print priority of 40 for the hp_dj2 printer.
F.
Assign the Legal group the Allow – Print permission for the hp_dj2 printer.
Explanation:
The problem in this scenario is that the Legal group’s printing requirements interferes with the print jobs from the other groups. When ever the legal-size paper tray is empty, the current print job stops until the paper tray is filled. When this happens, the other print jobs in the queue are paused while they wait for the current print job to complete. If we create a separate printer for the other groups and only allow members of those groups to print to the new printer, we can use print priorities to ensure that their print jobs take precedence over the print jobs from the Legal group and are not paused when the legal-size paper tray is empty.
Incorrect Answers:
B: The existing printer to which the Legal group can print should have a lower priority than the new printer.
E: The new printer to which the Legal group cannot print should have a higher priority than the existing printer.
F: Assigning the Legal group the Allow – Print permission to the new printer will not resolve the problem as their print jobs are causing the problems.
Reference:
Brian Barber, Chad Todd, Norris L. Johnson, Jr., & Robert J. Shimonski,Configuring and Troubleshooting Windows XP Professional, Syngress Publishing, Rockland MA, 2001, p. 646.