The suggested work-around is a poor substitute for the functionality available in XP. So I have to create an MMC with each remote computer in my network in order to view or troubleshoot scheduled tasks remotely? Using this method, I am getting a permission denied error when I attempt to add in scheduled task on a remote computer, but I am a domain admin and have the correct network permission.
What I am generally finding with windows 7 is that tasks that were simple to accomplish in XP now take many more steps in Window 7, or require goofy work-arounds. I am having the same issue, when I follow your instructions I receive the following error: You do not have permission to access this computer.
I have even attempted going through XP Mode from a win7 workstation x64 joined to our domian and still cannot gain access. I even tried starting mmc with the runas command using our domain administrator account info with no luck. When I try from a regular XP workstation on our domain it works fine with all the same accounts so I know it is not them.
The reason I ask is that when I connect to another computer server R2 x64 from my Windows 7 x64 enterprise all latest security updates and patches both I appear to connect but when I slect the library I get a dialog "Task Scheduler service is not available. Task Scheduler will attempt to reconnect to it. After I click the OK button on the bottom the same dialog reappears almost instantly - I can't close it using the X at the top - nothing, have to use task manager to kill the freaking thing.
Now I know task scheduler is available because I can remote into the box and use it, I can also do this same action in Windows XP, so what is the problem with Windows 7?! I guess it's my contribution and hilarious to the guys in our dev shop when I show them this little bug and comment "Windows 7 was MY idea!
Would appreciate any help of course, if a mod wants to actually try their suggestion with the same OS types before posting. If you just browse to the machine through another Server machine using Windows Explorer you can see the scheduled task folder and access it. You have to have admin access on the remote server to modify the scheduled tasks. MMC task scheduler snapin allows me to see and manage tasks from other machines under windows 7 - however I cant see an option to trigger the task to run.
Am i missing something? It used to be as easy as right click run on XP. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows 7 User Interface. Sign in to vote. I would like to be able to view and change Scheduled Tasks on remote Server machines by browsing to them or using a UNC path.
You have a couple of options. One you can run the program as a scheduled task this allows the program to run A programmatically and B when no user is logged on. Also the failure handling in scheduled tasks is not very full featured. However, Services can be a pain to develop and will require you to write some code.
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I tried a service, but I couldn't get that going. It is currently running as a scheduled task, but the problem is if I need to run it manually, when I log off, it stops, even if I tell it to run as the admin. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google.
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