Windows 2000 Server
You install and run a third-party 32-bit application named Application on your Windows 2000 Server computer. After several days, the application stops responding. You open Task Manager and find that the CPU usage is at 100 percent. The normal range of CPU usage on the server is from 20 percent to 30 percent You end the application. However, you see that the CPU on the server is still at 100 percent. Task Manager shows no other applications running. You then examine the Processes page in Task Manager and confirm that the Application.exe process is no longer running. You want to return the CPU usage to its normal range. What should you do?
Use Computer Management to stop and restart the Server service
Use Task Manager to end and automatically restart the Explorer.exe process
Use Task Manager to end any related child processes
Use Computer Management to stop and restart the Workstation service
Add a second hard disk. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Create a Temp folder on the new partition. Mount the system partition as the Temp folder on the new p
In the systemroot folder, create a shortcut named Temp that points to the second partition on the disk
None of above
Add a second hard disk. Delete the contents of the SystemrootYTemp folder. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Mount the partition as the SystemrootYTemp folder
On the second partition, create a shared folder named Temp