They are both administrator accounts and have privileges to do anything on the system.
"/" is the root directory in Linux. Make sure not to confuse this with the "/root" directory, which is the home directory for the user "root" (similar to "Administrator" on Windows)
There are many differences between Windows NT and Linux. Skipping over the obvious ones ( Windows NT is made by Microsoft, Linux has a higher server market share, etc...), probably the most interesting difference is how security is structured. Linux's basic security / permissions structure is modeled after that of older Unices. Different users are assigned different privileges, and a single "root" user can do anything. Windows NT has no "root" user, and no single account has absolute power. In theory, this makes NT more secure, since more accounts would have to be compromised to gain control of the system. In practice, a single "Administrator" account is all that is usually needed to hijack an NT system, and many Linux distributions disable the root account by default.
The Linux administrator is called the "root" user.
tap root and fibers roots
your mom and my grandma. get the difference ;)
What Is The Difference Between TapRoot And Fibrous Root? Tap rootgives the support to the plant and fibrous rootsearch the water and mineral salts in the ground. A main root is a tap root.
Root can refer to either the superuser, a user who can "do anything". or the base of the file system hierarchy.The base of the file system is "/", and subdirectories are placed under it, such as /bin or 'boot.
Tiny root is multicellular whereas root hair is unicellular
In Windows, it's called the Administrator account. In *nix systems it's generally called the root/superuser account.
You need to be the Root (First admin) to do that.
They are the same.
Root means solution in this context.