If they are using an administrative account, there is no way to stop. This is the point, administrator can do anything.
You will have to log in with administrator account and change the privileges to admin for that required account.
You can become a network administrator by creating your account and ticking that you will be the network administrator and that you are allowed access to everything.
Log in as the Administrator then change the conditions of your user account
Yes and no. In Windows, there is actually only one account named "Administrator". However you can add extra accounts with total "Administrator privileges". Most of the time, unless you specify a restricted account, any account added under an administrator account has the exact same privileges as the administrator. Other operating systems may differ from this. I am only referring to the popular Windows operating system.
Release restricted funds by creating a journal entry which is a credit to the restriction account and a debit to retained earnings
You would have to have an administrator account to set up a restricted guest account, and lock out the panel access.The applicable registry instructions are at the related link below.
Yes. The administrator can turn the parental controlled account into an administrator account. Then the administrator can go into the account and install something into the account. Then the administrator can go back into the administrators account and turn the account back into a parental controlled account.
Creating a user account that makes someone a system administrator varies depending on the operating system. For Windows Vista, it is as simple as going to the control panel, clicking on user accounts, and clicking on change your account type. From there it can be made an administrator.
Windows XP will not change an administrator account to limited if it is the only administrator account on the system (other than the account named Administrator).
"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
yes, but u have to b an administrator to do it -how do i become an administrator, then!!
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