You are preparing to install Windows 2000 Professional on 75 new computers. You want to create a standard installation image to use on all the new computers. The computers have several different configurations of hard disks and hardware components. You install Windows 2000 Professional and other standard software on one of the computers. You log on to the computer using the local Administrator account. You configure the standard applications and customize the desktop settings you intend to deploy. You run the Setup Manager and create a Sysprep.inf file. You copy Sysprep.exe and Setupcl.exe to the C:/Sysprep folder. You run Sysprep.exe and run your third party disk imaging software. You copy the image to the several test computers and restart the computers. When the installation is complete, you find that some of the computers do not function at all. You also find that the desktop settings do not appear as you have configured them on the original computer. You want to correct the imaging process and ensure that all computers have the same standard desktop. What should you do? (Choose two)
A.
Copy Sysprep.inf to C:/Sysprep folder.
B.
Copy the Administrator profile to the Default User profile, and then grant permissions to the Everyone group to use the profile.
C.
Include the-pnpparameter for Sysprep.exe when you rerun that utility.
D.
Include the-nosidgenparameter for Sysprep.exe when you rerun that utility.