The Server Message Block (SMB) Protocol is a network file sharing protocol, and as implemented in Microsoft Windows is known as Microsoft SMB Protocol.
Kerberos
NFS protocol
NTLM
SNMP (simple Netwrork Managenet Protocol) provides system management tool for networks. An administator can monitor remote computers running Windows clients with SNMP Agent.
POP is Post Office Protocol. It is a protocol used by email clients to retrieve emails from a remote server.
They can wait for a preferred answer but usually it is the first one that does it. DHCP protocol allows the implementor some flexibility in this matter. Then again, it all depends on what 'preferred' means.
The Mixed mode is for networks that have Windows 98/ME in addition to Windows 2000/XP/2003 clients. Mixed mode requires the RAC (Remote Application Client) to be installed for proper communication with the clients. The Native modeis for networks that consist only of Windows 2000/XP/2003 clients. The CMS server communicates natively with the clients using Windows networking features that aren't available in 98/ME clients. The RAC program is not needed. If you have no or few 98/ME clients, choose this option.
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) assigns IP Addresses & other DHCP Options to Clients.
Typically if a protocol is no longer in use on a network then it would be unbound from the interface, both on servers and on clients.
Most email programs that use individual clients use POP (Post office protocol). Web based programs like Yahoo and Gmail use http protocol.
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) assigns IP Addresses & other DHCP Options to Clients.
Most email clients use one of three protocols to receive an email message. They are SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol), POP (Post Office Protocol), or IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol).