Examination Profile MCITP 70-643 Windows Server 2008 Application Structure, Configuring

By Quincy Webster


This article walks the reader through the 70-643: TS: Windows Server 2008 Applications Infrastructure, Configuring exam. It debates difficulty spots, preparation hints, and detailed examination aims. By reading this, you will get a better notion of what can be expected from the examination and the examination process.

Examination 70-643 is intended to test how well candidates are prepared to manage desktops and desktop applications in medium to large sized affiliations. This examination is significant for two differing reasons.

First, 70-643 is a needed exam for those seeking the Microsoft Authorized IT Pro (MCITP) : Concern Director certification. More importantly though, a big part of being a network director revolves around desktop management. Passing this examination proves a candidates desktop management expertise.

Examination Details

Number of questions: Microsoft doesn't disclose the amount of questions on their examinations, but those who have taken this examination often report seeing about 55 questions.

Types of questions: Multiple Choice, Hot Area, Reorder, and Build a Tree. This exam does not contain any real-world example questions.

Passing score: 700 out of 1000

Time limit: 120 minutes

How to register: Prometric.

Microsoft Project is a desktop client that enables scheduling, cost, and resource management for individual projects. There are two versions, Standard and Professional; there is some additional functionality in the Professional version (especially in 2010), the most significant being that the Standard version will not work with Project Server.

Microsoft Project Server allows the aggregation of different project plans, along with collaboration, offered through Microsoft SharePoint technologies. Where 2003 and 2007 could use either Windows SharePoint Services or the more full-featured Microsoft SharePoint Server, 2010 requires the Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010, Enterprise Edition platform, along with all of its rich reporting, collaboration, and search functionality.

Project Portfolio Server provides the ability to capture, define, and select new projects by analyzing them based on the organization’s strategic objectives, resource capacity, and financial constraints. With 2010, Portfolio Server is no longer separate but rather is completely integrated into Microsoft Project Server as a single product.

Microsoft’s EPM solution has matured remarkably over the past three releases, from a loose confederation of products in 2003, through a rebuild of the products in 2007, into the robust and sleek 2010 solution that completely integrated the Project Server and Project Portfolio products into a single product that competes well against almost any other EPM solution.




About the Author:



LihatTutupKomentar
Cancel