
Where is the Windows Run command located? - Super User
Where is Windows Run dialog box located? The Windows Run dialog box is a resource located in c:\windows\system32\shell32.dll. The dialog can be opened by running the following …
Force a program to run *without* administrator privileges or UAC?
Aug 4, 2010 · Is there any way that I can force a program that normally requires administrator privileges (via UAC) to run without them? (ie: no UAC prompt and no system-wide access.) …
windows - Run as different user and elevate - Super User
Oct 18, 2013 · How do I run as a different user AND run in an elevated context? A perfect example of this would be opening an elevated command prompt using a different user context …
How to enable execution of PowerShell scripts? - Super User
Start Windows PowerShell with the "Run as Administrator" option. Only members of the Administrators group on the computer can change the execution policy. Enable running …
Windows + R (run) command to open Network Connections dialog
Nov 8, 2014 · Find myself constantly changing NIC properties every day (switch, router, etc. config). Any happy fun command to open this dialog (.cpl or .msc) from the Run dialog?
windows - run powershell command from cmd - Super User
May 24, 2016 · 0 I placed the following commands into a batch file to reset Edge (which has been giving some problems from time to time). The batch file was then run at Administrator level. …
How to run batch file command with elevated permissions?
Aug 13, 2016 · You can take advantage of PowerShell, which is present on every modern Windows system. Split the commands that need elevation off into a separate batch file, e.g. …
How to run a .exe file in command prompt - Super User
Aug 30, 2015 · I don't know much about command prompt, or how it is used, but I want to get a code to access a program of mine and I wants me to open a .exe file with command prompt …
how to run a powershell script as administrator - Super User
Feb 12, 2010 · This worked for me, but Run as Administrator only became available after adding powershell -f in front of the script path, so as to "complete" the command…
How do I run multiple commands on one line in PowerShell?
Ampersand not allowed. The `&` operator is reserved for future use Does PowerShell have an operator that allows me to quickly produce the equivalent of & in a cmd prompt? Any method …