well the underlying issue is that when they shutdown the machine and then log back in the settings are not retianed why is that?
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Browse All Topicsi have 4 mac computers that i need to setup for static network access. when i do this and they reboot the mac computer does not retain the settings. how do i put static access on the network adapter to accept my static settings for the network such as ip address , subnet etc. the users are all logged in as admin as well. I need to change that too and give them admin acces but under their user name?
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Apple's tech document:
http://docs.info.apple.com
will show you how to change the admin password. The steps you want are near the end of the doucument.
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by: crackyPosted on 2007-04-23 at 22:48:23ID: 18963615
To assign the IP addresses manually, you need to go to the Network System Preferences pane and double-click the network interface you will be using. This will usually be the first in the list, but you may have several. In the TCP/IP tab, you will be able to configure the IPv4 option by selecting the drop-down and selecting Manually.
Users in Mac OS X will never be given full admin rights by default. You will be prompted for the master password to make any system-level changes. You can use the Accounts section of System Preferences to adjust permission levels. The GUI will not let you give a user root admin rights and it's not recommended to allow any user the ability to make system-level changes without being prompted for a master password.
If you mean that all users are using the same account and you want them to have their own accounts, you can easily use the Accounts System Preferences pane to add a user with admin rights. Even with admin rights, you will still need the master password to make system-level changes and install critical updates.