Written on October 14th, 2009 by viliyana89no shouts
You install Windows XP Professional on your portable computer. The computer is configured to use an IEEE 1394 PC card. You use the computer to download pictures from a digital camera while you are at the office. You attend a meeting every Monday. During the meeting you use a battery to supply power to your portable computer. Occasionally, the battery runs out of power during these meetings. You need to configure the computer to conserve battery power while you attend your weekly meeting without affecting your power options when you use the computer at your office. You should also Create an additional hardware profile, and disable the IEEE 1394 PC card for this profile. To ensure the optimal performance in different networking environments, we should create different hardware profiles that the users can choose from under different network environments. We do not require the IEEE 1394 PC card at the meeting therefore we should create a profile that has the IEEE 1394 PC card disabled to save the battery resources used to power this card. We can then choose this profile when he we are at the meeting.
Written on October 13th, 2009 by viliyana89no shouts
You have just installed Windows XP Professional on a portable computer for a user. The computer is configured to have a modem and Ethernet PC card. At the office, the user uses his computer in a docking station. At home, he uses his computer in an undocked state by using the power adapter. This user travels to customer locations frequently. While traveling, he creates and edits documents. When he returns from a customer location, he inform you that the battery power in his computer has not lasted as long as he would like. You need to configure user’s portable computer to conserve battery power for his sales trips. You should create a new hardware profile named Remote. Use Device Manager to disable the modem and Ethernet PC card devices for this hardware profile. A hardware profile is used to store the configuration settings for a set of devices and services that are used on a computer. In Windows XP Professional you can create different hardware profiles to meet a user’s needs in different situations. The user can then choose the appropriate profile the Windows XP Professional should load when starting the computer. To ensure the optimal performance in different networking environments, we should create different hardware profiles that the users can choose from under different network environments. In this scenario we should create a profile that has the modem and Ethernet card disabled to save the battery resources used to power these cards. The user can then choose this profile when he is visiting client sites.