A basic Win 7 question

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Can Programs & features be ran with elevated privileges? I.e using the run as, either through elevated command prompt, shortcut or with the use of another program?
 
If you right click a program you should get the "run as administrator" option, yes.

Also in the advanced properties of a shortcut is the option to "run as adminstrator"
 
I might be going blind...

right click on programs and fewatures only shows 3 options.

I created a shortcut and advanced properties the run as administrator is greyed out
 
You need to do it on the actual program, not programs and features.

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So how would I carry our repairs on say, 6 different programs like Office 2003 along with 3 or 4 custom office addons?
 
Dude, start again, you're not makeing any FFFUUUUUU sense!

If you want to run repairs on the installed programs, you'll have to do it from Programs and Features. You'll have to interact with it, but I don't know why you'd want it elevated?

You could elevate a command prompt and run msiexec /fpecms for instance.
 
How am I not making sense -

I work for company that is getting Windows 7 & Office 2010
Users will not have local admin rights for security
I need to carry our repairs/removal of software that is in programs and features (without logging them off all their work, RDPing on as myself and then doing the fixes. This will take a lot of time compaired to carrying out the repairs as the user like you do in windows xp)

I have been told that an elevated command prompt cannot be used to run programs and features

Is there a way?
 
Surely anything which requires elevated privileges will just prompt you for your admin password, regardless of the user logged in. That's what happens on our domain at work anyhow.
 
Surely anything which requires elevated privileges will just prompt you for your admin password, regardless of the user logged in. That's what happens on our domain at work anyhow.

Nope.

OP - Just use the switch user functionality then when you are done switch back to the users session. Surely repairs will want reboots anyway so don't see the issue. User wont be able to work while you are anyway.

Making a mountain out of a mole hill when users could spend 30 seconds saving their work. (which they SHOULD BLOODY WELL BE DOING before you even start work, what if it locks up/crashes/reboots etc etc)
 
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