Problem: It is well known that if a file is locked in Windows, an administrator can take control of the file by taking ownership of it, give himself permissions to write/delete it and then perform pretty much anything he needs to do with the file. Sometimes, however, you just receive an error message when you try to take ownership, even though you are an administrator, and even though the command prompt or Windows Explorer you are working from has been started by right-click - "Run as administrator"
Solution: Open Computer Management and open shared folders - open files. If the file in question is being held by someone that has opened the file over a fileshare, you first have to terminate their connection to the file before you can manipulate it. Of course, you should first make sure you are not disturbing any work they are doing on the file.
Solution: Open Computer Management and open shared folders - open files. If the file in question is being held by someone that has opened the file over a fileshare, you first have to terminate their connection to the file before you can manipulate it. Of course, you should first make sure you are not disturbing any work they are doing on the file.
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