Want this question answered?
The account "Administrator" has the description "built-in account for administering this computer". This is your local admin account, when logged into it you can access everything on that computer. This account is simply for that PC and you will need an additional account for editing Network Settings.
You can delete almost any account but Administrator, User and other built-ins.
The built-in Administrator account CANNOT be deleted. The standard security practice is to rename the built-in Administrator account, set a strong password on it, and create another accounts with limited privileges set, for regular use, reserving the Administrator account as a back-up in case something where to happen to your regular account. If this administrator account is one you made yourself you can delete it. 1) Open the control panel and select the user account option. 2) Select the account you wish to delete then choose the "Delete Account". 3) Then if you wish choose the "Delete all files" option.
No u cant. They r called built in for a reason
None! Somebody has removed them.
The administrator account and the guest account.
Just connect your player to your computer and view your players files from Windows Explorer and delete the unwanted files.
With most Unix-derived systems, "root" is the super-user account.
Local System.
UAC: Admin Approval Mode For The Built-In Administrator Account: Enabled
Your account must be of administrators type, or you can use built-in Administrator account if does not have password. Or if it has one and you know it.
"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