I decided to take the plunge and update from Mojave to Big Sur. After doing so, all of my user accounts are all "standard", no "admin". Obviously I cannot unlock the preferences pane in system prefs, there being no admin privileges.
I've tried everything here:
1: Reinstalling Big Sur and hoping for a new setup screen so I could add a new user and give admin privileges. Unfortunately I just get the standard sign in screen with the 2 standard users. Nothing that would allow for creating a new user.
2: Resetting PRAM and SMC-many times, no dice!
3: rebooting as single user and using terminal to force the setup screen on reboot. Curiously, my terminal does not put me at "localhost:/root" like it used to but now the prompt is "-bash-3.2#" (minus the quotes.) so any of the various terminal methods I have found fail to work. I am not knowledgeable in Unix so I do things by rote instruction.
I am deadlocked. I was almost ready to do a clean install, erasing everything but even attempting to do a Time Machine backup requires admin authentication as does any other backup scheme or application like CCC. I also have thousands of $$ in plugin licenses that I could upload to the cloud but to do so requires, you guessed it, an admin user.
Fortunately I do have a Carbon Copy Clone of my Macintosh HD, fully bootable, that I did right before the upgrade that I could possibly use migration assistant to get things back but that's about it.
Has anyone experienced this, and have any other ideas as to how to remedy my situation? Any help would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Dave Kowalski
www.davidkowalski.com
dave@davidkowalski.com
I've tried everything here:
1: Reinstalling Big Sur and hoping for a new setup screen so I could add a new user and give admin privileges. Unfortunately I just get the standard sign in screen with the 2 standard users. Nothing that would allow for creating a new user.
2: Resetting PRAM and SMC-many times, no dice!
3: rebooting as single user and using terminal to force the setup screen on reboot. Curiously, my terminal does not put me at "localhost:/root" like it used to but now the prompt is "-bash-3.2#" (minus the quotes.) so any of the various terminal methods I have found fail to work. I am not knowledgeable in Unix so I do things by rote instruction.
I am deadlocked. I was almost ready to do a clean install, erasing everything but even attempting to do a Time Machine backup requires admin authentication as does any other backup scheme or application like CCC. I also have thousands of $$ in plugin licenses that I could upload to the cloud but to do so requires, you guessed it, an admin user.
Fortunately I do have a Carbon Copy Clone of my Macintosh HD, fully bootable, that I did right before the upgrade that I could possibly use migration assistant to get things back but that's about it.
Has anyone experienced this, and have any other ideas as to how to remedy my situation? Any help would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Dave Kowalski
www.davidkowalski.com
dave@davidkowalski.com