You can't, that's the whole idea of having them.
The closest OS X has to a root account is the adminstration account. When you want to install or remove any program on the hard disk you will need that login and password. The person who set up the computer has that information. But you has to give it every time If you have a username and password and want to set up a new account then you have to give the administrator passward and can do it. So you can have administrative privileges in one window, set up the other account, and when this is done, so is the privilege. It is not enough to make a user with UID with value 1. if you have administrative privileges you can start a "Root" terminal to run installation scripts. Otherwise, if you have the Administrator password, you can use the "sudo" command in front of the script (just as for Linux) and get the installation done.
administrative law judge
It's the employees who provide support at an office. Clerks, secretaries, Administrative Assistants...
No
Bertram Robert Cottine has written: 'BNA administrative practice manual' -- subject(s): Administrative agencies, Administrative procedure, Executive departments, Judicial review of administrative acts
yes you do
Past tense of account is accounted
Answer: A user account which has Administrative rights. (an Admin account)
The root account is the administrative account on Linux; this account has control over everything in the system.
An account of past events is a history of something.
/root
you will need access to an administrator account to remove the restrictions it has put in place to limited users.
No. The administrative account cannot be deleted at all.Once in - If you are using passwords you can delete the password and if it is the only account the op-system will not ask for passwords again. However you need to be logged in as the administrator to do this.The boot password is different from the administrator account.
Speak to your tutor or contact the administrative department.
The account in Unix that has the most power is the administrative account 'root'. It can do anything on the system.
If they are using an administrative account, there is no way to stop. This is the point, administrator can do anything.
Admin Approval Mode