You are an Enterprise administrator for contoso.com. The company has a head office and a branch office. The corporate network of the company consists of a single Active Directory domain. All the domain controllers in the domain run Windows Server 2008 and all client computers run Windows Vista.
The English language version of Windows Vista is installed in the head office use and the Spanish language version of Windows Vista is installed in the branch office.
Which of the following options would you choose to configure custom application settings by using a Group Policy object (GPO) to allow administrators to view and edit the GPO in their own language and minimize the number of GPOs deployed?
A.
Create an ADM file and then configure the GPO and link it to the domain.
B.
Configure and link a Starter GPO to the head office site. Backup and import the Starter GPO from the main office site and link it to the branch office site.
C.
Install the English language and the Spanish language on all domain controllers and then configure and link a GPO to the head office site. Backup the GPO from the head office site and import and link it to the branch office site.
D.
Create ADMX and ADML files and then configure and link the GPO to the domain.
E.
None of the above
Explanation:
To configure custom application settings by using a Group Policy object (GPO) to allow administrators to view and edit the GPO in their own language and minimize the number of GPOs deployed, you need to create ADMX and ADML files and then configure the GPO and link it to the domain.
ADMX files are language neutral. This basically means that the descriptions of Group Policy settings are not part of the .admx files. They are stored in .adml files. Vista automatically loads the correct .adml files. This is a very useful feature for international companies. Administrators in different countries can work with the same templates, but always get the descriptions of the Group Policy settings in their own language.
ADMX files are like ADM files only templates. The Group Policy settings are still populated to the clients thru registry.pol files. That’s the reason why ADMX files and ADM files can coexist.
Reference: Group Policy templates in Windows Vista: ADMX files replace ADM files
http://4sysops.com/archives/group-policy-templates-in-windows-vista-admx-files-replace-adm-files/