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2. A Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition. You Will Learn. About Windows NT/2000/XP architectureHow to install Windows 2000 ProfessionalHow to install hardware and applications with Windows 2000How to install and support Windows NT Workstation. 3. A Guide to Managing and Ma
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1. Chapter 13 Understanding and Installing Windows 2000 and Windows NT
2. 2 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition You Will Learn
About Windows NT/2000/XP architecture
How to install Windows 2000 Professional
How to install hardware and applications with Windows 2000
How to install and support Windows NT Workstation
3. 3 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Windows NT/2000/XP Architecture
4. 4 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Windows NT/2000/XP Modes
5. 5 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition User Mode Processor mode in which programs:
Have only limited access to system information
Can access hardware only through other OS services
Used by several subsystems
Windows tools run primarily in user mode
Applications relate by way of the Win32 subsystem
6. 6 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Programs Interacting with Subsystems
7. 7 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Kernel Mode Processor mode in which programs have extensive access to system information and hardware
Used by two main components
HAL (hardware abstraction layer)
Executive services
8. 8 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Networking Features Workgroups
Domains
Native mode and mixed mode(Windows 2000)
Active Directory (Windows 2000)
9. 9 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Workgroups Logical groups of computers and users that share resources
Each computer maintains a list of users and their rights on that particular PC
Use peer-to-peer networking model
10. 10 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition A Windows Workgroup
11. 11 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Domains Groups of networked computers that share a centralized directory database of user account information and security
Use client/server model
Have a domain controller which stores and controls the SAM database (user, group, and computer accounts)
12. 12 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition A Windows Domain
13. 13 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Windows NT/2000/XP Logon Default administrator account
Has the most privileges and rights
Can create user accounts and assign them rights
14. 14 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition How Windows NT/2000/XP Manages Hard Drives
15. 15 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition A Choice of File Systems
16. 16 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition A Choice of File Systems (continued) FAT uses three components to manage data on a logical drive
FAT
Directories
Data files
NTFS uses a database called the master file table (MFT) as its core component
17. 17 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Master File Table (MFT)
18. 18 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Advantages of NTFS over FAT Recoverable
Supports encryption and disk quotas (Windows 2000/XP only)
Supports compression, mirroring drives, and large volume drives
Provides added security when booting from floppy disks
Uses smaller cluster sizes
19. 19 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Advantages of FAT over NTFS Less overhead; best for hard drives < 500 MB
Backward-compatibility with Windows 9x and DOS OSs
Allows booting from a DOS or Windows 9x startup disk to access the drive
20. 20 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Windows 2000 Professional Clean install
Overwrites all information from previous OS installations
Upgrade installation
Can be installed to be dual-booted with another OS
21. 21 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning the Installation Verify minimum requirements
At least 650 MB free space on hard drive
At least 64 MB of RAM
133-MHz Pentium-compatible CPU or higher
Select file system (NTFS, FAT16, or FAT32)
Use the Microsoft Web site to verify components for Windows 2000: computer, peripheral hardware devices, and software
22. 22 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Windows 2000 on Networked Computers Consider where Windows 2000 installation files are stored
Convenience of putting them in the \i386 directory on a file server (distribution server)
Options for installation
Unattended installation
Drive imaging (disk cloning)
Know how to configure to access the network
23. 23 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Upgrade or Clean Install? Clean install, erasing existing installations
Fresh start
Must reinstall applications software and restore data from backups
Upgrading existing operating system
Applications, data, most OS settings are carried forward
Installation is faster
Creating a dual boot
Not recommended between Windows 2000 andWindows NT
24. 24 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning an Upgrade from Windows 9x to Windows 2000 Considerations
Registries are incompatible
Run Check Upgrade Only mode of Windows 2000 Setup to check for compatibility
25. 25 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning an Upgrade from Windows 9x to Windows 2000 (continued) Hardware compatibility
Windows 2000 does not import drivers from Windows 9x
Windows 2000 deletes all Windows 9x system files and replaces them with Windows 2000 system files
26. 26 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning an Upgrade from Windows 9x to Windows 2000 (continued) Software compatibility
Windows 9x applications store registry data differently and may rely on APIs specific to Windows 9x
27. 27 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning an Upgrade from Windows NT to Windows 2000 Considerations
If using NTFS, Setup automatically upgrades to Windows 2000 version of NTFS
If using FAT16 or Windows NT with third-party software that allows Windows NT to use FAT32, Setup asks whether you want to upgrade to NTFS
28. 28 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning an Upgrade from Windows NT to Windows 2000 (continued) Hardware compatibility
Most hardware and drivers will work
Check HCL on the Microsoft Web site or run Check Upgrade Only mode of Setup
29. 29 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Planning an Upgrade from Windows NT to Windows 2000 (continued) Software compatibility
Nearly all applications will run with some exceptions
Antivirus software and third-party network software
Some disk management tools
Custom tools for power management
Custom solutions that are workarounds forWindows NT not supporting PnP
Software to monitor and control a UPS
30. 30 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Steps to Install Windows 2000 Use Winnt.exe or Winnt32.exe, both located in the \i386 directory
Access CMOS setup and verify settings
31. 31 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Clean Installation If PC is capable of booting from a CD
Insert the CD and turn on the PC
Setup Wizard appears
If PC does not boot from a CD and you have a clean, empty hard drive
Create a set of Windows 2000 setup disks to boot the PC and to begin installation
Remaining installation is done from the CD
32. 32 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Clean Install When Hard Drive Has an OS Installed Process if you use Windows 9x and the PC automatically detects a CD in the CD-ROM drive
Process if the PC does not automatically recognize a CD
33. 33 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Upgrade Installation Prepare for installation
Verify that all devices and applications are Windows 2000-compatible
Scan memory and hard drive for viruses
Back up critical system files and data files
Close all applications and disable virus-scanning software; decompress hard drive (if compressed)
34. 34 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Upgrade Installation (continued) Perform the upgrade
Insert CD; Setup Wizard runs
Report phase
Setup phase
Text mode
GUI mode
35. 35 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition After Installation: Backing Up the System State Download and install all OS service packs, updates, and patches
Verify that all hardware works and install additional devices
Create user accounts
Install additional Windows components and applications
Verify that the system functions properly and backup the system state
36. 36 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Hardware and Applications Under Windows 2000 Add New Hardware Wizard automatically launches when new hardware is detected
Software is best installed from Add/Remove Programs icon of Control Panel
37. 37 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Hardware
38. 38 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Updating a Device Driver
39. 39 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Applications Windows 2000 Add/Remove Programs utility looks different and provides more options:
Change or remove presently installed programs
Add new programs from CD, floppy disk, or from Microsoft over the Internet
Add or remove Windows components
40. 40 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Applications (continued)
41. 41 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Supporting Windows NT Different ways to install Windows NT
Troubleshooting the Windows NT boot process
42. 42 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Installing Windows NT as the Only OS Installation files are stored in the \i386 directory on CD-ROM drive
If hard drive has no OS, boot from three start up disks; installation continues from CD
To perform an upgrade to Windows NT:
Boot the OS
Execute Winnt.exe on the Windows NT CD
43. 43 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Troubleshooting theWindows NT Boot Process If Windows NT boot loader menu appears, use Last Know Good configuration
If unable to boot from hard drive, use three boot disks; select option To repair a damaged Windows NT version 4.0 installation
Try reinstalling Windows NT in its current folder; tell Setup it is an upgrade
Move hard drive to another system that runs Windows NT (last resort if using NTFS)
44. 44 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Last Known Good Configuration A copy of hardware configuration from the registry that is saved by the OS each time it boots and the first logon is made with no errors
Contained in the registry key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\HARDWARE
Reverting to it causes loss of any changes made to hardware configuration since Last Known Good was saved
45. 45 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Windows NT Boot Disks Three disks required to hold enough ofWindows NT to boot
Format a disk using Windows NT Explorer
46. 46 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Creating Windows NT Boot Disks
47. 47 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition The Windows NT Emergency Repair Disk (ERD) Contains information unique to the OS and hard drive
Can be used to fix a problem with the OS
Enables restoration of Windows registry on the hard drive, which contains all configuration information for Windows
Also includes information used to build a command window to run DOS-like commands
48. 48 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Files on the ERD
49. 49 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Using Boot Disks and the ERD to Recover from a Failed Boot Boot disks to boot Windows NT
ERD to recover critical system files on hard drive
50. 50 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Using Boot Disks and the ERD to Recover from a Failed Boot (continued)
51. 51 A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, Fifth Edition Summary Windows NT/2000/XP share the same basic architecture and have similar characteristics
How to install Windows 2000 Professional
How to install hardware and software under Windows 2000
Windows NT installation and support