system -> admin -> users and groups.
Or, since this question is in the "Windows XP" category, are you asking how to create a new user on Ubuntu from within Windows XP?
Creating a new user in Linux or Unix is typically done with the adduser command. The basic syntax is:adduser -g [group] -n [username]where group is the group (admin, scanners, cups, vboxusrs, etc...) that you want the new user to be part of, and username is the name that they log in with. You will need either root access, or be part of the "sudoers"group in Ubuntu.
If you mean user then: You must have administrator rights. For windows: Start Menu >> Control Panel >> Users >> Create new User For Mac: Apple Icon >> System Preferences >> Users >> Create new User
You need to go to user accounts and create a new user there from the control panel
restrict access to the PS3 or the controller. You do not need a password to create a new user and once created the new user can sign into a PSN account or create a new one
It is the users opinion! That is what Ubuntu stands for, too. The user has a choice, and Ubuntu wants to be that choice. I like Ubuntu more than OSX and I think it looks a lot more professional.
create an organization, create a role, add a user
Control Panel
Kernel, but I guess when you will learn, you will have to switch (Ubuntu for programmers and gamers and Kali Linux for penetration testers and hackers)
This is for xp::start>control panel>user accounts>create new account
To create a user in Oracle 10g, you can use the SQL command CREATE USER. For example, you can execute CREATE USER username IDENTIFIED BY password; to create a new user with a specified username and password. After creating the user, you typically need to grant privileges using the GRANT command, such as GRANT CONNECT, RESOURCE TO username;, to allow the user to log in and perform actions in the database.
Most games are designed to run only on Windows PC's. In order to user some Windows programs on Ubuntu, you will have to utilize Wine.
It was originally created to be a temporary fork of Debian to allow for the development of strong desktop features for it. In the end, however, Ubuntu stayed forked and Debian doesn't generally benefit from Ubuntu's feature set. Short answer: Ubuntu was created to produce a "user friendly" version of Debian.