Microsoft Outlook 2003

  • Thread starter Thread starter Stuart
  • Start date Start date
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Stuart

Hi. I have Vista Home Edition. I am trying to set up my mail accounts with
Microsoft Outlook 2003 in Vista. When I put all the details and I test the
setting it asks me to verify the E mail address. I know its correct as it
works ok in Windows mail

Is Outlook 2003 able to work in Vista or do I have a setting wrong???
 
Stuart said:
Hi. I have Vista Home Edition. I am trying to set up my mail accounts with
Microsoft Outlook 2003 in Vista. When I put all the details and I test the
setting it asks me to verify the E mail address. I know its correct as it
works ok in Windows mail

Is Outlook 2003 able to work in Vista or do I have a setting wrong???
Yes it works OK, try an MS Outlook newsgroup with your problem Stuart.
 
Stuart said:
Hi. I have Vista Home Edition. I am trying to set up my mail accounts
with Microsoft Outlook 2003 in Vista. When I put all the details and I
test the setting it asks me to verify the E mail address. I know its
correct as it works ok in Windows mail

Is Outlook 2003 able to work in Vista or do I have a setting wrong???

Outlook works but you are doing something wrong. Here is standard
information about that. If you need more help after this, post in an
Outlook newsgroup such as microsoft.public.outlook.general.

The most common problems for people having trouble sending/receiving
email are:

1. You are using the wrong mail server settings. Check your ISP's
website ( or that of your web hosting company if your mail host is other
than your ISP) for the correct mail server settings for POP (Incoming)
and SMTP (outgoing). Most ISP's will also have a "walkthrough" to show
you how to set up mail using popular email clients such as Outlook
Express, Eudora, and Thunderbird. If they don't have instructions for
Windows Mail yet, use the ones for Outlook Express.

2. You have "outgoing mail server requires authentication" checked when
it does not. Or vice versa.

3. You are trying to send mail through an SMTP server that isn't your
regular ISP; i.e., you are trying to send mail through AT&T's server
when your ISP is Comcast. Some ISP's care about this and some don't.

4. Your user name and/or password are incorrect. Yes, you do have a user
name and password for your email. It probably has just been a long time
since you set this up (or someone else set it up for you) and you've
forgotten. Look through your ISP-related documentation or contact your
ISP. They will be able to tell you your user name and assign you a new
password.

5. Your antivirus is set to scan emails and/or is one that causes
problems with your operating system (such as McAfee in Vista). Turn this
option off since it doesn't provide you any extra protection and tends
to cause problems.


Malke
 
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