MCSE : Security Specialist
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CERTIFIED IN JUST 18 DAYS - 2003 PATH
Our 18 day
accelerated MCSE 2003: Security+ Training BootCamp provides
information technology professionals with the knowledge and skills
necessary to install, configure, support, and troubleshoot
Microsoft® Windows 2000- and 2003-based networks with a focus on
information security in the enterprise. This is an accelerated
course, designed for computer professionals that require effective,
real-world skill-building and timely certification.
Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Program:
- Allows you to achieve your certifications in a fraction of the
time of 'traditional training' while delivering industry-leading
exam passing percentages
- Helps students grasp complex technical concepts more easily by
identifying and catering to individual student learning styles
through a mixed visual, auditory and kinesthetic-tactual delivery
system
- Enhances retention by employing accelerated learning techniques
focused on committing information to long-term memory
-
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A domain provides several benefits:
You can organize the objects in the domain into organizational
units. An organizational unit is a collection of
objects
in a domain. Objects are representations of the actual physical
components that exist in an organization’s network. They are
associated with one or more domains, such as users, specific
groups of users, computers, applications, services, files, and
distribution lists.
For example, consider a domain in the network of a company. To
simplify the management of all the resources in the company
network, the resources of each department in the company can be
organized into an organizational unit. Each organizational unit
can be managed by someone in that department. In this manner,
each department in the company constitutes an organizational
unit, and the network administrator can manage groups of
organizational units instead of individual resources.
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Easy location of information
Publishing a resource refers to making it available in a listing
of domain objects, which makes it easy for users to locate and
use the resources. For example, if a printer installed in a
domain is published, users can locate it from the list of domain
objects and access it. If the printer is not published, users
can still access it, but they have to know its location to be
able to do so.
Applying a group policy to the domain establishes how users can
access, configure, and use domain resources, which consolidates
resource and security management. These group policies are
applied only within the domain, not across domains.
Domains enable you to assign permissions to an administrator to
manage objects in an entire domain or in one or more
organizational units within the domain. This eliminates the need
for a number of administrators with wide ranging administrative
authority and overlapping responsibilities.
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