Same version of Windows.
Same domain (very first point in the original post).
The account running the process has local admin rights on both servers. The account is a domain account. Technically, the only thing that should matter is that the account has rights to administer the scheduled tasks on the machine where the scheduled tasks are created and run (SERVER_A).
I can use the Scheduled Task Manager directly on SERVER_A; or running Scheduled Task Manager on SERVER_B and remotely administering the scheduled tasks on SERVER_A.
Same domain (very first point in the original post).
The account running the process has local admin rights on both servers. The account is a domain account. Technically, the only thing that should matter is that the account has rights to administer the scheduled tasks on the machine where the scheduled tasks are created and run (SERVER_A).
I can use the Scheduled Task Manager directly on SERVER_A; or running Scheduled Task Manager on SERVER_B and remotely administering the scheduled tasks on SERVER_A.