The super administrator account for joomla is called The Administrator. When logging in using the default account password, you should gain access to your Joomla account. If not then contact customer service to reset your account.
"Administrator" is a built in account that comes with Vista. What it sounds like you are trying to do is change the name of your account to "administrator" or create a new account called "administrator" but that name is already taken by the built-in account - you can't have two accounts with the same name, even if one is called"Administrator" and the other is called "administrator". You should be able to create a new account and assign administrator privileges to it in Vista. You can even call it something close to "Administrator" - something like "administrator1" would probably work. You should also be able to change the name of the built-in account, but the name "administrator" may still be reserved and not available for you to use even if you change the name of the built-in Administrator account. I'm not at a Vista machine where I can test it out.If the problem is an inability to create an administrator TYPE of account, then you are faced with a different problem and something is wrong with the OS
The account you used to delete the administrator acount must have admin rights. Use that account to create an account with administrator rights called Administrator. control panel -> user accounts -> add or remove accounts -> create new account
ADMINISTRATOR and GUEST accounts, though the GUEST account is disabled by default in XP Home and XP Prof.
In Windows, it's called the Administrator account. In *nix systems it's generally called the root/superuser account.
This is the beauty of a file system called NTFS. NTFS is based on security, and is on any Windows computer from Windows 2000 to now. This makes things such as trying to change the administrator's password from a standard account not possible. NTFS additionally adds file protection - your files will not be viewed from a standard account if set to as an administrator. Your answer in short is no. There is no way to change the administrator password with a standard account.
The "Guest" account, when created by an administrator, does not have a password. If the administrator created a "User Account" called 'Guest' then the administrator may have given it a password. If you are an administrator of the Mac and you are having trouble with the guest account, delete it and restart. Then create a new 'Guest' account by selecting "Guest" in the control panel. The Guest account creates a temporary work area for a guest on the Mac, and deletes all the files created by the user when the Mac is shut down, or the user logs off.
The Linux administrator is called the "root" user.
Administrator has more rights; Power users account can read from and write to parts of the system other than their own local drive, install applications and perform limited administrative tasks.Administrator account can install and uninstall devices and applications and can perform all administrative tasks. When windows 2000/XP is first installed one user account is created in this group and the account is called the Administrator
administrator is a unisex term
The person that initially set the computer up created that account name. The name signifies that the account is protected against security risks. For more information on computer security visit Answers.com
To create a new user account under any Linux distribution use command called useradd. The system administrator is responsible for creating account. Login as root user (or use sudo command).
A fiduciary is one who owes a duty of good faith, trust, confidence and a high standard of care in managing the property and money of another. An executor or administrator of an estate is a fiduciary. Therefore an estate account is also called a fiduciary account. The short answer to your question is yes.