Free ChromeOS-Administrator Exam Braindumps (page: 6)

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You need to get to the enterprise enrollment screen.
What should you do?

  1. Press Ctrl-Alt-E during the Chrome bootup sequence (Chrome logo animation)
  2. Sign in with enterprise enrollment credentials provided by the customer at the user sign-in screen
  3. Press Ctrl-Alt-F on the initial welcome screen to set initial settings
  4. Press Ctrl-Alt-E at the user login screen before any user has signed in to the device

Answer(s): A

Explanation:

Power on or reboot the Chromebook.
Watch for the Chrome logo animation. This is the key moment to trigger enterprise enrollment. Press Ctrl+Alt+E simultaneously. This keyboard shortcut interrupts the normal boot process and redirects the Chromebook to the enterprise enrollment screen. Follow the on-screen instructions. You'll be prompted to enter information such as the domain name of the organization and enrollment credentials.
Why this is the correct method:
Enterprise Enrollment Timing: The Ctrl+Alt+E shortcut is specifically designed to be used during the bootup sequence, before any user profile is loaded. This ensures the device is enrolled in the organization's management system from the start.
Alternative Options: The other options mentioned are incorrect:
B (Sign in with credentials): This assumes the device is already enrolled and is used for regular user login.
C (Ctrl+Alt+F): This shortcut is used for accessing the ChromeOS developer shell (Crosh) and is not related to enrollment.

D (Ctrl+Alt+E at login): While technically possible to enroll at the login screen, it's not the recommended method as it might not apply settings correctly to all user profiles.


Reference:

Enroll a Chrome device: https://support.google.com/chrome/a/answer/1360534?hl=en



You are enrolling several devices to send to a remote location. How can you ensure that these devices will automatically connect to the wireless network at the remote location when powered on for the first time?

  1. Add the wireless network credentials to the "Networks" section in the Admin console ensuring that they are applied to the ChromeOS devices By Device
  2. Use the Google Zero-Touch Enrollment (ZTE) process and generate the provisioning token by clicking on the 'Enroll device' button in the Admin console `'Devices'' page
  3. During the enrollment process add the wireless credentials manually to each device in the Admin console ensuring that they are applied to ChromeOS devices By User
  4. Add the wireless network credentials to the 'Networks" section in the Admin console ensuring that they are applied to the ChromeOS devices By User

Answer(s): A

Explanation:

To ensure ChromeOS devices automatically connect to a specific wireless network upon initial power-on at a remote location, follow these steps in the Google Admin console:
Navigate to Device Management > Chrome Management > Networks. Add the Wi-Fi network credentials (SSID and password) to the list of networks. Set the network configuration to apply By Device. This ensures that the credentials are pushed to the device itself, not tied to a specific user.
When the devices are powered on at the remote location, they will automatically detect and connect to the configured Wi-Fi network without requiring any manual intervention from the user. Option B (Zero-Touch Enrollment) simplifies the initial setup process but doesn't automatically configure Wi-Fi.
Options C and D are incorrect because applying network settings by user won't ensure automatic connection on first boot before any user logs in.



As a ChromeOS Administrator, you are tasked with blocking incognito mode in the ChromeOS Browser. How would you prevent users from using incognito mode?

  1. Navigate to "Users & Browser Security Settings' and set the "Disallow incognito mode" policy
  2. Go ,0 "User & Browser Settings' to restrict sign-in to pattern and "Disallow incognito mode "
  3. From "Device Settings' change Kiosk settings to "Disallow incognito mode "
  4. ln "Enrollment Settings" disable vended access and incognito mode (or content protection

Answer(s): A

Explanation:

Access the Google Admin Console: Sign in to the Admin console using your ChromeOS administrator credentials.
Locate User Settings: Navigate to "Device Management" > "Chrome Management" > "User & browser settings".
Find Incognito Mode Policy: Within the settings, search for "Incognito mode". Disable Incognito Mode: Select the option to "Disallow incognito mode". Save Changes: Click "Save" to apply the policy to the designated users or organizational units.


Reference:

Set up Chrome browser on managed devices:
https://support.google.com/chrome/a/answer/3523633?hl=en



What format of certificate encoding is incompatible with ChromeOS devices?

  1. PEM
  2. CER
  3. DER
  4. CRT

Answer(s): C

Explanation:

ChromeOS primarily uses the PEM format for certificate encoding.
While it can handle other formats like CER and CRT, it does not support the DER format. DER is a binary format, while ChromeOS requires certificates in a text-based format.






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