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Press the "Edit user groups" button to bring up the User rights management screen. This screen can also be accessed by via the link "User rights management" under the Tools section of your sidebar, visible when you are on a page in a user's userspace. In our case, you can find the link when you are on the page User:ThisIsaTest.
{{subst:Administrator without tools}} <!-- insert an optional message here --> ~~~~ paste the code to the bottom of the user's talk page. Then remove insert an optional message here and replace it [b] with An appropriate message that you want to include. This will produce a new section with a level 2 header and a stylized message box with your ...
Create a new mainspace page (users without this right are redirected to the Article Creation Workflow landing page) createtalk: Create a new talk page delete: Delete a page with ≤ 5,000 revisions deletechangetags: Delete tags from the database deletedhistory: View the history of a deleted page or a user's deleted contributions, provided it is ...
There are lots of ways in which you can do admin stuff, without being an admin; for example: get involved in Category:Wikipedia maintenance; get involved in Category:WikiProjects; get involved in Category:Wikipedia backlog; get involved in fighting vandalism; if you've been reverting vandalism for a while, any admin can give you rollback rights
Administrators monitor each other; nearly all admin actions are reversible by any other admin (including page deletions, page protections, and blocks). The Arbitration Committee also has the power to sanction administrators, and does so fairly regularly.
They are added to this category when an editor publishes their user talk page with {{subst:Administrator without tools}} in place. This category is a self-reference and so is part of the Wikipedia project itself rather than the encyclopedic content.
Windows 1.0–3.11 and Windows 9x: all applications had privileges equivalent to the operating system;; All versions of Windows NT up to, and including, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003: introduced multiple user-accounts, but in practice most users continued to function as an administrator for their normal operations.