EXERCISE 1.01G ENERATING A G ROUP P OLICY M ODELING R EPORTIN THIS EXE...

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Using Windows Server 2003 Planning Tools and Documentation • Chapter 1

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Figure 1.13

Printer Pools and Prioritized QueuesVPFinance Printer 3Graphics DesignFinance Printer 2StaffFinance Printer 1Color Laser PrinterFinance Queue

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OTEYou should implement a printer pool only if the printers themselves are physicallyclose to one another; otherwise, your users will be running from printer to printerlooking for their output.On the opposite end of the spectrum, you can have multiple logical print queues feedto a single physical printer in order to prioritize your users’ print jobs.You can assign a pri-ority to a print queue between 1 and 99. Print jobs from higher-priority print queues willbe processed before jobs submitted from lower-priority print queues.You can also establish schedules in which printing to a certain queue may not be avail-able at all. In Figure 1.13, there are three print queues set up for a single color laser printer.Let’s say that you want your graphics designers to have first priority when printing to thisdevice, followed by any of your vice presidents.You can assign a priority of 99 to theGraphics Design print queue and a priority of 1 to the VP queue. Furthermore, you’verecently discovered that some staff members have stayed after business hours to print per-sonal material to the color laser printer. In order to keep from wasting the expensive colorlaser toner, you can establish a third Staff queue that can only be printed to between thehours of 9:00

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