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Microsoft AZ-140 Exam - Topic 7 Question 17 Discussion

Actual exam question for Microsoft's AZ-140 exam
Question #: 17
Topic #: 7
[All AZ-140 Questions]

You have a Azure Virtual Desktop host pool named Pool1 that is integrated with an Azure Active Directory Domain Services (Azure AD DS) managed domain.

You need to configure idle session timeout settings for users that connect to the session hosts in Pool 1.

Solution: From the Azure portal you modify the Advanced settings in the RDP Properties of Pool1.

Does This meet the goal?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Marci
4 months ago
Not sure about this one, seems too simple for such a task.
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Jerry
4 months ago
Totally agree, modifying RDP properties is the way to go!
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Ettie
4 months ago
Wait, can you really change idle timeout in RDP properties?
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Timothy
5 months ago
I think it should be done through the user settings instead.
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Mona
5 months ago
Yes, that's the right way to set it up!
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Ligia
5 months ago
I’m a bit confused. I thought RDP properties could control session timeouts, but now I’m not so sure. I might need to double-check the documentation on this.
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Barrie
5 months ago
This question feels familiar. I think I practiced something similar where we had to adjust settings in the Azure portal, but I can't recall if it was specifically for idle sessions.
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Crista
5 months ago
I’m pretty sure that the idle session timeout settings are actually configured in the Azure Virtual Desktop settings, not just the RDP properties. So I would lean towards No.
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Leanna
5 months ago
I think modifying the RDP properties might not be enough for setting idle session timeouts. I remember something about needing to configure it in the host pool settings instead.
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Maynard
5 months ago
I'm leaning towards systemctl stop as the first step, since we need to stop the current service before we can use the new version of the file.
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Ruthann
5 months ago
Okay, let me break this down. The app is an Azure Function that's triggered by a blob. It's timing out after 4 minutes, but it needs to process the blob data. The solution suggests using an App Service hosting plan and enabling Always On. That makes sense to me - the Always On setting should keep the app running and prevent the timeout. I'll go with that.
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Oliva
5 months ago
I think I remember that WebView allows you to display web content, so I'm leaning towards True.
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Valentine
5 months ago
I'm leaning towards B. Windows Phone 8.1 since that's an older mobile OS that would likely require more IT involvement.
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