How can I make the computer beep from a script/program called by the Windows task scheduler?
I am using Windows 7 home edition. I want to make my computer wait a certain amount of time, then beep in warning right before it terminates a program. As a test, I wrote the following batch file to make Windows Media Player play the radio, wait 10 seconds, then beep and turn it off:
@echo off
start "_" "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe" "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
sleep 10
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
taskkill /im wmplayer.exe /f
Note: following instructions I found in another question on this site, the "^G" thingy is the character you get when you type control + G at a command prompt. It does not seem to appear on this site, so I replaced it with ^G.
This worked perfectly. Until, that is, I attempted to make it run automatically using the Windows Task Scheduler. I tried this several times an it did not beep. The other functions worked fine, but no beep was audible.
The script did not run in a window when started by the task scheduler, and I concluded that this must cause problems with the echo command (nothing to echo to). So, after spending some time searching for a method of causing the beep that did not involve echo, I eventually rewrote the whole thing in the form of a VB .NET console program:
Imports System.Threading
Module Beep
Sub Main()
Dim wmp As New System.Diagnostics.Process
wmp.StartInfo.FileName = "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe"
wmp.StartInfo.Arguments = "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
wmp.StartInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden
wmp.Start()
Thread.Sleep(New TimeSpan(0, 0, 10))
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
wmp.Kill()
End Sub
End Module
This works the same way — including the fact that it only beeps when called manually. When called from the task scheduler, it also fails to beep. I'm not sure what else to try, here. Any help would be appreciated.
windows-7 cmd.exe vb.net
add a comment |
I am using Windows 7 home edition. I want to make my computer wait a certain amount of time, then beep in warning right before it terminates a program. As a test, I wrote the following batch file to make Windows Media Player play the radio, wait 10 seconds, then beep and turn it off:
@echo off
start "_" "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe" "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
sleep 10
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
taskkill /im wmplayer.exe /f
Note: following instructions I found in another question on this site, the "^G" thingy is the character you get when you type control + G at a command prompt. It does not seem to appear on this site, so I replaced it with ^G.
This worked perfectly. Until, that is, I attempted to make it run automatically using the Windows Task Scheduler. I tried this several times an it did not beep. The other functions worked fine, but no beep was audible.
The script did not run in a window when started by the task scheduler, and I concluded that this must cause problems with the echo command (nothing to echo to). So, after spending some time searching for a method of causing the beep that did not involve echo, I eventually rewrote the whole thing in the form of a VB .NET console program:
Imports System.Threading
Module Beep
Sub Main()
Dim wmp As New System.Diagnostics.Process
wmp.StartInfo.FileName = "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe"
wmp.StartInfo.Arguments = "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
wmp.StartInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden
wmp.Start()
Thread.Sleep(New TimeSpan(0, 0, 10))
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
wmp.Kill()
End Sub
End Module
This works the same way — including the fact that it only beeps when called manually. When called from the task scheduler, it also fails to beep. I'm not sure what else to try, here. Any help would be appreciated.
windows-7 cmd.exe vb.net
add a comment |
I am using Windows 7 home edition. I want to make my computer wait a certain amount of time, then beep in warning right before it terminates a program. As a test, I wrote the following batch file to make Windows Media Player play the radio, wait 10 seconds, then beep and turn it off:
@echo off
start "_" "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe" "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
sleep 10
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
taskkill /im wmplayer.exe /f
Note: following instructions I found in another question on this site, the "^G" thingy is the character you get when you type control + G at a command prompt. It does not seem to appear on this site, so I replaced it with ^G.
This worked perfectly. Until, that is, I attempted to make it run automatically using the Windows Task Scheduler. I tried this several times an it did not beep. The other functions worked fine, but no beep was audible.
The script did not run in a window when started by the task scheduler, and I concluded that this must cause problems with the echo command (nothing to echo to). So, after spending some time searching for a method of causing the beep that did not involve echo, I eventually rewrote the whole thing in the form of a VB .NET console program:
Imports System.Threading
Module Beep
Sub Main()
Dim wmp As New System.Diagnostics.Process
wmp.StartInfo.FileName = "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe"
wmp.StartInfo.Arguments = "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
wmp.StartInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden
wmp.Start()
Thread.Sleep(New TimeSpan(0, 0, 10))
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
wmp.Kill()
End Sub
End Module
This works the same way — including the fact that it only beeps when called manually. When called from the task scheduler, it also fails to beep. I'm not sure what else to try, here. Any help would be appreciated.
windows-7 cmd.exe vb.net
I am using Windows 7 home edition. I want to make my computer wait a certain amount of time, then beep in warning right before it terminates a program. As a test, I wrote the following batch file to make Windows Media Player play the radio, wait 10 seconds, then beep and turn it off:
@echo off
start "_" "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe" "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
sleep 10
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
@echo ^G
taskkill /im wmplayer.exe /f
Note: following instructions I found in another question on this site, the "^G" thingy is the character you get when you type control + G at a command prompt. It does not seem to appear on this site, so I replaced it with ^G.
This worked perfectly. Until, that is, I attempted to make it run automatically using the Windows Task Scheduler. I tried this several times an it did not beep. The other functions worked fine, but no beep was audible.
The script did not run in a window when started by the task scheduler, and I concluded that this must cause problems with the echo command (nothing to echo to). So, after spending some time searching for a method of causing the beep that did not involve echo, I eventually rewrote the whole thing in the form of a VB .NET console program:
Imports System.Threading
Module Beep
Sub Main()
Dim wmp As New System.Diagnostics.Process
wmp.StartInfo.FileName = "C:Program Files (x86)Windows Media Playerwmplayer.exe"
wmp.StartInfo.Arguments = "http://www.cpr.org/content_category_templates/listenTemplate/listenClassical48.asx"
wmp.StartInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden
wmp.Start()
Thread.Sleep(New TimeSpan(0, 0, 10))
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
Console.Beep()
wmp.Kill()
End Sub
End Module
This works the same way — including the fact that it only beeps when called manually. When called from the task scheduler, it also fails to beep. I'm not sure what else to try, here. Any help would be appreciated.
windows-7 cmd.exe vb.net
windows-7 cmd.exe vb.net
edited Jul 15 '14 at 15:18
Der Hochstapler
68k49230285
68k49230285
asked Apr 8 '11 at 3:19
gorcqgorcq
21113
21113
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
It's possible that there's a problem with trying to launch the media player system from a script. You can create a batch script with the Ctrl+G
character as you mentioned, and it will use the system beep. I don't think the Ctrl+C
method you were talking about actually works.
Open a command prompt, change directories to where you want to save the batch file, and type the following commands:
copy con beep.cmd
Ctrl+G, Ctrl+Z
Now, if you run beep.cmd
, it should use the system beep.
I created a system task to run this batch file, and when I run the task manually, the command window appears and beeps, then exits.
The way this works is that it copies whatever you type in the command window into the specified file, in this case beep.cmd
. You can't just put in ^G
in the file, even though that's what appears on screen, because typing that is really just typing ^
and G
, while ^G
is actually a representation of a different ASCII character altogether. By using the command window method, you can save the actual keypress into the file. You can then edit the batch file if you want it to do other things, just make sure to preserve the line with the special character. It will probably just look like an empty box in notepad.
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
add a comment |
Look for an option in your Task Scheduler in your Scheduled Task's properties called [something along the lines of] "interact with user" or "interactive" (or something like that). It should be a checkbox, and if you turn it on then it should cause your task to appear in the GUI as well as the audio system.
Failing that, Steve Gibson's (the creator of the famous SpinRite disk repair utility) has a freeware command-line tool called "Wizmo" which can play a .wav file from a batch file:
Wizmo (no installation required - this is a stand-alone tool)
http://www.grc.com/wizmo/wizmo.htm
I'm hoping that this can do the job for you as well (if it does, then you'll obviously need to record a beep sound in a .wav file).
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
1
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
|
show 3 more comments
protected by Ramhound Jan 15 at 2:47
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2 Answers
2
active
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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active
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active
oldest
votes
It's possible that there's a problem with trying to launch the media player system from a script. You can create a batch script with the Ctrl+G
character as you mentioned, and it will use the system beep. I don't think the Ctrl+C
method you were talking about actually works.
Open a command prompt, change directories to where you want to save the batch file, and type the following commands:
copy con beep.cmd
Ctrl+G, Ctrl+Z
Now, if you run beep.cmd
, it should use the system beep.
I created a system task to run this batch file, and when I run the task manually, the command window appears and beeps, then exits.
The way this works is that it copies whatever you type in the command window into the specified file, in this case beep.cmd
. You can't just put in ^G
in the file, even though that's what appears on screen, because typing that is really just typing ^
and G
, while ^G
is actually a representation of a different ASCII character altogether. By using the command window method, you can save the actual keypress into the file. You can then edit the batch file if you want it to do other things, just make sure to preserve the line with the special character. It will probably just look like an empty box in notepad.
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
add a comment |
It's possible that there's a problem with trying to launch the media player system from a script. You can create a batch script with the Ctrl+G
character as you mentioned, and it will use the system beep. I don't think the Ctrl+C
method you were talking about actually works.
Open a command prompt, change directories to where you want to save the batch file, and type the following commands:
copy con beep.cmd
Ctrl+G, Ctrl+Z
Now, if you run beep.cmd
, it should use the system beep.
I created a system task to run this batch file, and when I run the task manually, the command window appears and beeps, then exits.
The way this works is that it copies whatever you type in the command window into the specified file, in this case beep.cmd
. You can't just put in ^G
in the file, even though that's what appears on screen, because typing that is really just typing ^
and G
, while ^G
is actually a representation of a different ASCII character altogether. By using the command window method, you can save the actual keypress into the file. You can then edit the batch file if you want it to do other things, just make sure to preserve the line with the special character. It will probably just look like an empty box in notepad.
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
add a comment |
It's possible that there's a problem with trying to launch the media player system from a script. You can create a batch script with the Ctrl+G
character as you mentioned, and it will use the system beep. I don't think the Ctrl+C
method you were talking about actually works.
Open a command prompt, change directories to where you want to save the batch file, and type the following commands:
copy con beep.cmd
Ctrl+G, Ctrl+Z
Now, if you run beep.cmd
, it should use the system beep.
I created a system task to run this batch file, and when I run the task manually, the command window appears and beeps, then exits.
The way this works is that it copies whatever you type in the command window into the specified file, in this case beep.cmd
. You can't just put in ^G
in the file, even though that's what appears on screen, because typing that is really just typing ^
and G
, while ^G
is actually a representation of a different ASCII character altogether. By using the command window method, you can save the actual keypress into the file. You can then edit the batch file if you want it to do other things, just make sure to preserve the line with the special character. It will probably just look like an empty box in notepad.
It's possible that there's a problem with trying to launch the media player system from a script. You can create a batch script with the Ctrl+G
character as you mentioned, and it will use the system beep. I don't think the Ctrl+C
method you were talking about actually works.
Open a command prompt, change directories to where you want to save the batch file, and type the following commands:
copy con beep.cmd
Ctrl+G, Ctrl+Z
Now, if you run beep.cmd
, it should use the system beep.
I created a system task to run this batch file, and when I run the task manually, the command window appears and beeps, then exits.
The way this works is that it copies whatever you type in the command window into the specified file, in this case beep.cmd
. You can't just put in ^G
in the file, even though that's what appears on screen, because typing that is really just typing ^
and G
, while ^G
is actually a representation of a different ASCII character altogether. By using the command window method, you can save the actual keypress into the file. You can then edit the batch file if you want it to do other things, just make sure to preserve the line with the special character. It will probably just look like an empty box in notepad.
answered Apr 8 '11 at 4:05
nhinkle♦nhinkle
30k31126167
30k31126167
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
add a comment |
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
Sorry, that ^C is a typo. I did ctrl+G in the actual batch file. I'm pretty sure that's true because it does work when I run the file manually. Just to make sure, I redid the batch file properly just now, with the same results. I'm going to edit my question to avoid future confusion.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:26
add a comment |
Look for an option in your Task Scheduler in your Scheduled Task's properties called [something along the lines of] "interact with user" or "interactive" (or something like that). It should be a checkbox, and if you turn it on then it should cause your task to appear in the GUI as well as the audio system.
Failing that, Steve Gibson's (the creator of the famous SpinRite disk repair utility) has a freeware command-line tool called "Wizmo" which can play a .wav file from a batch file:
Wizmo (no installation required - this is a stand-alone tool)
http://www.grc.com/wizmo/wizmo.htm
I'm hoping that this can do the job for you as well (if it does, then you'll obviously need to record a beep sound in a .wav file).
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
1
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
|
show 3 more comments
Look for an option in your Task Scheduler in your Scheduled Task's properties called [something along the lines of] "interact with user" or "interactive" (or something like that). It should be a checkbox, and if you turn it on then it should cause your task to appear in the GUI as well as the audio system.
Failing that, Steve Gibson's (the creator of the famous SpinRite disk repair utility) has a freeware command-line tool called "Wizmo" which can play a .wav file from a batch file:
Wizmo (no installation required - this is a stand-alone tool)
http://www.grc.com/wizmo/wizmo.htm
I'm hoping that this can do the job for you as well (if it does, then you'll obviously need to record a beep sound in a .wav file).
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
1
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
|
show 3 more comments
Look for an option in your Task Scheduler in your Scheduled Task's properties called [something along the lines of] "interact with user" or "interactive" (or something like that). It should be a checkbox, and if you turn it on then it should cause your task to appear in the GUI as well as the audio system.
Failing that, Steve Gibson's (the creator of the famous SpinRite disk repair utility) has a freeware command-line tool called "Wizmo" which can play a .wav file from a batch file:
Wizmo (no installation required - this is a stand-alone tool)
http://www.grc.com/wizmo/wizmo.htm
I'm hoping that this can do the job for you as well (if it does, then you'll obviously need to record a beep sound in a .wav file).
Look for an option in your Task Scheduler in your Scheduled Task's properties called [something along the lines of] "interact with user" or "interactive" (or something like that). It should be a checkbox, and if you turn it on then it should cause your task to appear in the GUI as well as the audio system.
Failing that, Steve Gibson's (the creator of the famous SpinRite disk repair utility) has a freeware command-line tool called "Wizmo" which can play a .wav file from a batch file:
Wizmo (no installation required - this is a stand-alone tool)
http://www.grc.com/wizmo/wizmo.htm
I'm hoping that this can do the job for you as well (if it does, then you'll obviously need to record a beep sound in a .wav file).
answered Apr 8 '11 at 3:35
Randolf RichardsonRandolf Richardson
13.5k2950
13.5k2950
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
1
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
|
show 3 more comments
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
1
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
I don't see any options containing the word interactive or similar. I'm going to have to look more closely at that wizmo thing.
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 3:44
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
@gorcq: I recall seeing this option in Windows XP, but in Windows 7 it does appear to have disappeared. That's too bad (I wish Microsoft wouldn't drop good features like this). =(
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 8 '11 at 3:47
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I saw the interactive option on Windows Server 2008 (Vista Server). Would they have removed it from 7 if Task Scheduler uses the same DLL for these two versions of Windows? EDIT I may be mistaken.
– user3463
Apr 8 '11 at 3:59
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
I have now tried with wizmo, and get the same problem: it works fine when run manually from the command line, but no beep when the Task Scheduler runs it. I just edited the batch file shown above and replaced all instances of "@echo ^C" with "wizmo play="C:WindowsMediaWindows Critical Stop.wav"".
– gorcq
Apr 8 '11 at 4:06
1
1
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
@Randolph Potter: Thanks for confirming that I'm remembering rather than imagining! (I'm unable to edit my previous comment, so I just added this one with the correct spelling of Randolph's name.)
– Randolf Richardson
Apr 12 '11 at 16:43
|
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protected by Ramhound Jan 15 at 2:47
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