Administrator or user. administrator.
administrator
No. The court will appoint an administrator if there was no Will.No. The court will appoint an administrator if there was no Will.No. The court will appoint an administrator if there was no Will.No. The court will appoint an administrator if there was no Will.
"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
Try Admin or Administrator. If you changed your administrator name, then try the name you used.
name the administrators for grandbahama
Global Administrator
Health Information Administrator
Individuals can have their own accounts on a Mac. These can be set up in the Accounts section of System Preferences. The account can be classed as Standard or Administrator. Administrator accounts allow access to parts of the system denied to standard account - such as the ability to install software. The settings for the Administrator account will have a name and a password that the user can set to anything they wish.
The administrator is hidden. Select My Computer, Manage, Local Users & Groups, click on Group, then Administrator, add your account name and there it is.
In Microsoft Windows, the Administrator password usually refers to the password of the Local Administrator account. The Local Administrator is a built-in user object to every instance of Windows, the default name being simply Administrator. The account name is almost always changed by Group Policy, but the convention remains to refer to the account's password as simply the "Administrator password". Strictly speaking, and Administrator password could be a password associated with any user account that has administrator privileges on a given system. You will sometimes here the term associated with web or cloud based applications. But usually, the term "Administrator password" is most closely associated with Microsoft Windows.
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