If a computer user is set up to have a login via password there is no way to change that unless you login and manually disable that.
Yes.....go to 'Control Panel' in your Start Menu >>Select 'User Accounts', you can password protect your computer from there.
Start Menu -------> Control Panel ------> Users --------> should be an option to set the password under the selected user
No.
Bios password- enter bios, security. Windows password, the type or brand of computer has nothing to do with windows passwords, xp or vista, does not know what kind it is and is the same on every computer. Go to start, control panel, user accounts, passwords.
Depending on what kind of OS you're running you can.
Get into the computer. Click start. Click run. Type cmd. Type in net user. It should say the owners name. Then press enter. Then type net user (Account Name) space, and then *. Press enter. Type in what password you want. Press enter. Retype the password you want. Have fun watching the person try to get in the computer. Beware of angry friends! Answer made by 3y3 of n0n3
Well, I know two ways you can do this... 1.) If you have not put an administrative password on your BIOS then you can start your computer and after post press F8. That will bring up your OS Menu as I call it. When the Options screen appears start your computer up in Safe Mode and log on to the Administrators Account, There you can change the password. After you have changed the password log off and restart your computer. 2.) Find someone that has a Winternals disk. For on that disk is a tool called locksmith. With this tool you can change any Administrative password on any Windows platform anytime. (Very Dangerous Disk to have!!!)
there is no password. if it is asking you for one than you did not start on unit 0. you have to complete some questions about yourself in order to unlock lesson one and the rest of your course
because the computer has no where to store it's files. The computer wont even start up without memory.
Start your computer in safe mode by repeatedly pressing F8 on BIOS startup. Log on as "Administrator". There should not be a password on Administrator. Go to User Accounts in control panel and click the account with the bad password. Then click "Remove Your Password." Restart your computer and click on the account, which now has no password. assign a new password, or just leave it with no password.
You only have one person on the computer then you shouldn't have to login.
Well, a computer doesn't lock its owner out independently, now will it? You should ask all the people who had been on your computer between the time from when you used it to the time when you found out about the scenario. One will probably tell you that he/she accidentally put a password on your computer. It's probably one of your family members.