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Microsoft MS-900 Exam - Topic 3 Question 2 Discussion

Actual exam question for Microsoft's MS-900 exam
Question #: 2
Topic #: 3
[All MS-900 Questions]

You are the Microsoft 365 administrator for a company.

You install Microsoft Office 365 ProPlus on five devices. You deactivate one device.

Which task can you perform on the deactivated device?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A

References:

https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/office_resource_kit/2014/01/17/office-365-proplus-multiple-devices-and-deactivation/

When you deactivate a Microsoft Office 365 ProPlus license, Office 365 ProPlus remains installed on the computer, but you can only view and print documents. All features for editing or creating new documents are disabled.

References:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/deployoffice/overview-of-licensing-and-activation-in-office-365-proplus


Contribute your Thoughts:

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Lisandra
4 months ago
Yup, printing is still possible!
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Raymon
4 months ago
Wait, can you really print? That seems odd.
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Devora
4 months ago
Definitely can leave comments, right?
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Haley
5 months ago
I thought you couldn't do anything on a deactivated device?
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Georgeanna
5 months ago
You can still print from a deactivated device.
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An
5 months ago
I remember reading that you can set properties on documents even if the device is deactivated, so D could be an option. But I need to double-check that!
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Silvana
5 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I feel like leaving comments might require an active license. So B could be out.
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Alita
5 months ago
I think I remember that even if a device is deactivated, you can still access some features like printing. So maybe A is the right choice?
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Ronnie
5 months ago
This question seems familiar! I practiced something similar where we discussed what you can do on deactivated devices. I think C might be possible too, but I'm not confident.
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Mireya
5 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit unsure about this one. The requirements mention both web service and SFTP options, so I'll need to think through the pros and cons of each approach and how they address the OMS reliability issue.
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Lavonna
5 months ago
Hmm, this is a tricky one. I'm not sure if I'd go with cheeseburgers or coffee machines. Both seem like things we buy out of habit. I'll have to think this through a bit more.
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Leonor
5 months ago
Okay, let's see here. The key requirement is that the administrators need to be able to configure the timeout and rate limiting. That suggests we'll need some kind of configurable solution, rather than a hardcoded one. I'm leaning towards option C, which mentions creating a site preference to store the timeout settings.
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