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TheDirtyBird

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About TheDirtyBird

  • Birthday 01/20/1980

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  1. I pulled this question out of the network+ exam prep. You've just installed two new network servers: one in building A and one in building B. The network operating system you selected supports the IPv6 protocol. You've loaded and confgured IPv6 on both servers and you want them to communicate with each other. However, the router between these two servers on support the IPv4 protocol. Given that you don' have a budget to purchase a new router, which IPv4 - IPv6 compatibility strategy could you use to enable communication? Answer: Tunneling There are three strategies recommended by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) for configuring IPv6 - IPv4 compatiblity: 1) Dual stack 2) Tunneling 3) 6to4 routing The dual stack strategy involves loading both protocol stacks at the same time on each host. The 6to4 routing strategy involves configuring special routers that connect IPv4 networks to IPv6 networks. Tunneling involves encapsulating IPv6 packets in IPv4 packets for transmission across an IPv4 network. Given the scenario in this question, the tunneling strategy would work the best. The dual stack stratey wouldn't allow the two systems to communicatie using IPv6. The 6to4 routing option would require purchasing additional equipment.
  2. Simple question. What is it's purpose?
  3. damn, the installation about broke my arm. Toward the end of the installation, I kept recieving this error: "windows could not update the computer's boot configuration" Finally, I disabled all boot devices and that worked. What a headache! Dell needs to fix their utility partition where it doesn't interfer with installations.
  4. FYI...I got the DVD to finally read. The DVD was labeled wrong. It was actually SQL Server 2008. :p
  5. I'll give that a shot. I can access the files on my WindowsXP computer. When I boot up the new DELL, the Windows Server 2008 CD starts to run. I get a message that says, "loading installation file (or something of that sort)". The progress bar gets about half way then I'm prompted with this message box: Systems Build and Update Utility Please insert a valid Windows Server 2008 DVD into the DVD drive.
  6. I got Windows Server 2008 for free through my college and is registered in my name. All is legal. But...I copied the installation onto my DVD (because I had to download the ISO from MSDN Academic Alliance) and now my new Dell PowerEdge T100 will not recognize the CD. This Dell is fresh out of the box with nothing on it (no OS.) Anybody got any suggestions on how I can get my Windows Server 2008 installed?
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