Jan 13, 2017 Looking for how to Reset Admin Password MacBook Air Without Administrator Password and you Forgot Mac Admin Password. It happens to me also I. How to Access a Terminal at Login Screen in Mac OS. Note you must have automatic login turned off on the Mac, otherwise you will not have access to the login screen on boot from which to access the console. Remember, not all versions of Mac OS support this feature. • Click the Apple logo at the top left of your screen and click System Preferences. Figure 1-1 • In the System section, click Users & Groups. Figure 1-2 • Your account name will be displayed under Current User. User privilege level is displayed below your account name as Admin, Standard, Managed or Sharing only. Figure 1-3 • To grant a user administrative privileges, click the lock, enter your root password, click your desired user and then select the check box for Allow user to administer this computer. Figure 1-4 • Restart your computer for the changes to take effect. Adobe reader mac os x 10.9.5. How to manage local admin accounts on Mac devices You can use a policy to create and manage local admin accounts on enrolled Macs in your organization. The Centrify Identity Services creates and stores an encrypted password that is unique to the managed local admin account on each device and rotates the password every 90 days. Administrators in your organization can use the Admin Portal to access this password when they need access to assist your users. Requirements for managing local admin accounts on Mac devices To create managed local admin accounts on Mac devices and access passwords for those accounts you must meet the following requirements. • The Mac devices are enrolled. Refer to for more information about device enrollment. • Users that need access to the managed local admin accounts (for example, IT staff) must be in a role with the Device Management (All) administrative right. Refer to for more information about administrative rights. • You have a policy set that applies to the Mac devices that you want to create a managed local admin account on. Refer to for more information about creating and applying policy sets. Creating managed local admin accounts on Mac devices You create managed local admin accounts on enrolled Mac devices using the Manage Local Admin Account policy. To create managed local admin accounts • Sign in to the Admin Portal, then click Core Services > Policies. • Select the policy set that you want to use to create managed local admin accounts, or create a new policy set for this purpose. Policy sets are applied to users by applying them to everybody, specified roles, or sets. For example, if you want to create managed local admin accounts on all Mac devices, you could apply the policy set to an OS X device set. In this case, the Policy Assignment area of the Policy Settings page would look like the following: Refer to for more information about applying policy sets. • Select Mobile Device Policies > OS X Settings > Manage Local Admin Account. • Set Create and manage a local admin account to Yes. Additional options appear after you enable the policy by selecting Yes. • Enter a name for the managed local admin account in the Account Name field if you do not want to use the default name. Note the following behavior when naming the managed local admin account. • The managed local admin account will have the same name on all enrolled Mac devices that the policy applies to. • If an existing local account with the same name (not FileVault enabled) exists, Centrify promotes that account to an admin account (if necessary) and changes the password. • If the existing local account with the same name is FileVault enabled, the corresponding FileVault password for that account will not be managed by Centrify. • You can change the account name at any time by editing the Account Name field in this policy setting. Changing the account name deletes the existing managed account and replaces it with a new one. • Specify a password rotation interval in days. You can specify values from 1 to 365 days, or specify 0 to disable password rotation. The default value is 90 days. In the following example, the Manage Local Admin Account policy is enabled, the managed local account name is set to centrify_admin, and the password rotation interval is set to the default value of 90 days. If enrolled Mac devices already have a local account named centrify_admin, Infrastructure Services resets the password and manages the account. • Specify the Checkout lifetime (minutes) value. This value is the length of time in minutes that users have to use a checked out password. Once the lifetime expires, the password is rotated and users will have to check it out again. The minimum checkout lifetime is 15 minutes. The default value is 60 minutes. • Specify whether to allow the primary enrolled user of a device to check out the local admin password.
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