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Activity 2-1: Repairing a Network Connection. Objective: Repair a connection that has a corrupt TCP/IP configuration Right click on your Local Area Connection Choose the repair option. Activity 2-2: Configure TCP/IP Parameters. Objective: View current IP address settings on a computer
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Activity 2-1: Repairing a Network Connection • Objective: Repair a connection that has a corrupt TCP/IP configuration • Right click on your Local Area Connection • Choose the repair option 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-2: Configure TCP/IP Parameters • Objective: View current IP address settings on a computer • In the network connections area under the control panel, right-click on Local Area Connection and select properties • Select the properties of the TCP/IP option • Enter appropriate information as dictated by the text 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-3: Using IPCONFIG to View IP Configuration • Objective: View current IP settings using the IPCONFIG utility • Open a command prompt and execute the command: ipconfig /all 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-4: Test APIPA • Objective: Test the APIPA functionality in Windows Server 2003 • Set the machine to determine an IP address automatically • Ensure that the machine will be incapable of finding a DHCP server • Check the IP address of the machine using the IPCONFIG utility 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-5: Alternative IP Configuration • Objective: Configure alternative IP address information to be used when a DHCP is unavailable • Make sure the computer will be unable to contact a DHCP server • Use the alternative configuration capability of Windows to specify the settings outlined in the text 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-6: Converting Binary Numbers to Decimal Using Windows Calculator • Objective: Use Windows calculator to convert between decimal and binary • Complete the tables 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-7: ANDing • Objective: Find the network ID given a subnet mask and IP address • Use ANDing to determine the network ID and complete the table provided in the text 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-8: Complex Subnetting • Objective: Subnet a large network into ten smaller networks • Divide the network 172.20.0.0 into ten smaller networks using the least amount of bits necessary • Complete the table provided 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-9: Finding Valid Hosts • Objective: Calculate the number of valid hosts on a subnet • Using three subnets from Activity 2-8, find the first host, last host, and broadcast address for each subnet • Complete the table provided 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-10: Installing NWLink • Objective: Install the NWLink protocol • Go to the local area connection properties and install the protocol 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-11: Configuring NWLink • Objective: Configure NWLink to use a specific frame type, IPX network address, and internal network number • After completing the configuration, use ipxroute config to ensure that your configuration settings are configured according to the instructions provided in the text 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-12: Installing AppleTalk • Objective: Install the AppleTalk protocol • Install the protocol as you would any other protocol 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-13: Optimizing Binding Order • Objective: Modify the binding order of protocols to optimize network communication • Use the advanced settings option in the network connections window 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network
Activity 2-14: Removing Unnecessary Protocols • Objective: Remove protocols that are no longer required • Use the Local Area Connection Settings Properties window to remove the protocols 70-291: MCSE Guide to Managing a Microsoft Windows Server Network