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It is, in fact, the method we use all users at our home and office are set up as administrators, relieving us of the more mundane tasks of Mac administration. And believe it or not, that may be a valid solution to the problem, depending on the competence and trustworthiness of your users. If you’re tired of running over to a user’s Mac just to enter a password so the print server can restart after a paper jam, then you may be thinking it’s time to give everyone admin privileges. (The print server always seems to enter a paused state when an administrator isn’t around to kick start it.)
Only a user with administrator privileges can get the print server running again. The Mac has a pretty straightforward model for assigning privileges to a user’s account, and in many cases, only the administrator has the right to stop, start, or pause services, such as pausing the print server when a printer jams. Are you the designated IT person for your family, or maybe for your small business? If you are, then perhaps you’re getting a bit tired of everyone asking you to provide your administrator name and password every time a printer jams, an app needs updating, or Time Machine throws an error code.
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