Archiv für September, 2011
Was ist ein Administratorkennwort bzw. wo finde ich es/kann es eingeben oder ändern?
Frage von Emil: Was ist ein Administratorkennwort bzw. wo finde ich es/kann es eingeben oder ändern?
Ich will mein xp mit hilfe der wiederherstellungskonsole retten. Ich werde nach dem Administratorkennwort gefragt, aber was ist das? Ich habe einen namen als registrierter eigentümer; einen computernamen; einen benutzernamen; eine domainanmeldung (gleichen wie meinen computernamen). Wo oder was ist ein administratorkennwort??? Muß ich ihn erstellen?wenn ja-wie?
Beste Antwort:
Answer by Yen
Der Benutzername ist, wenn es der eigene Computer ist, auch der Administratorname (in der Regel jedenfalls). Wenn zu diesem ein Passwort vergeben wurde, wird man beim Start danach gefragt. Das ist das Administratorkennwort. Bist du aber ein Zweit- oder Drittnutzer des PC, hast du ein Gastkonto auf diesem Rechner. In dem Fall hast du auch keine Administratorrechte. Gehe zu Systemsteuerung > Benutzerkonten um zu schauen wer der Administrator ist. Bis du es selbst und hast kein Kennwort, dann lass dir eins einfallen, schreibe es auf. Dann aktiviere bei dem Administratorkonto die Option Passwortgeschützt gib das Passwort 2x ein. Klicke auf ok. Der PC ist nun passwortgeschützt. Bei jedem Start musst du nun den Benutzernamen und zusätzlich das Passwort eingeben. Nun hast du bei der Frage nach dem Admin-Passwort eben eins und kannst es wegen der Frage bei der Wiederherstellungskonsole eingeben.
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Cahuilla Seal

Bild von Native American Seals/Logos
LOCATION AND LAND STATUS:
The Cahuilla Reservation lies in the Peninsular Range of southern California, 48 miles southwest of Palm Springs. The reservation was established by Executive Order of December 27, 1875. The acreage was increased on March 14, 1877 and was reduced two months later; additions on April 14, 1926 and March 4, 1931, brought the reservation to its present total area of 18,884 acres. All land is held in trust; only 2,000 acres belong to the tribe in common, the rest being assigned to individual members of the Cahuilla Band.
CULTURE AND HISTORY:
The language of the Cahuilla people belongs to the Takic branch of the Uto-Aztecan greater linguistic family. Elder reservation residents continue to speak their ancestral language. The reservation lies on the site of the ancient village of Paui, within the aboriginal territory of the mountain Cahuilla. Some forms of traditional music, such as Bird Songs and Peon Songs, remain important and are performed regularly on social occasions.
The Cahuilla were able to maintain their traditional subsistence patterns of hunting native game and gathering pinon nuts and mesquite beans even after being consigned to reservations in 1877. During the first part of the 20th century, the Cahuilla derived their income from wage labor, farming, and stock raising on reservation lands. None of the Cahuilla reservations participated in the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934; for tribal leaders, tribal autonomy remains a priority today.
In the early years of the 20th century, Cahuilla reservations retrieved some of the land that had been returned to the public domain by the 1891 Act for the Relief of Mission Indians. Cahuilla reservations joined other southern California Indian groups in the Indian Claims Commission Cases of the 1940s and 1950s, and some have also sued the government for determination of damages in respect to the loss of water rights.
CAHUILLA – The Cahuilla homeland lies in inland southern California; they traditionally spoke a language belonging to the Takic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family, a family that covers much of the Southwest and extends into central Mexico; there were still about 50 fluent speakers in 1991. The groups or "tribelets" of this people made their living partly in the foothill and mountain regions (where they depended on a variety of vegetable staples, especially acorns), and partly in the desert lands to the east of the Sierra divide (where they depended largely on piñon nuts and mesquite beans as staple foods). Today Cahuilla people live on the Agua Caliente, Augustine, Cabazon, Cahuilla, Los Coyotes, Morongo, Ramona, Santa Rosa, Soboba, and Torres Martinez reservations; there may be around 2,000 people of Cahuilla descent today.
GOVERNMENT:
Members age 21 or older make up the tribe’s General Council and elect the Tribal Council every two years. The Tribal Council elected officers include a chairperson, vice-chairperson, tribal administrator, and two council members. The Tribal Council also serves as the OEDP Committee. Additional standing/working committees are formed around issue-specific concerns such as personnel, economic development (Cahuilla Economic Ad Hoc Committee/C.E.A.), housing (All Mission Indian Housing Authority/A.M.I.H.A.), health (Riverside-San Bernardino County Indian Health), and education (Title V). The standing committees (Tribal Council, C.E.A., Building, Housing Improvement Projects, and Personnel) function within established policies and procedures. The tribe is organized under a non-IRA Constitution, which was revised in 1983.
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