MS Online Services

  • Thread starter Thread starter Tony Linguini
  • Start date Start date
T

Tony Linguini

My company has started using this and when I installed the sign-in client,
it created another profile in Outlook 2007. I now have to go to 2 profiles
to check all of my emails. Isn't there a better way?
Thank you.
 
My company has started using this and when I installed the sign-in client,
it created another profile in Outlook 2007. I now have to go to 2 profiles
to check all of my emails. Isn't there a better way?

Why not two accounts in the same profile?
 
I have 6 accounts in the "Outlook" profile. 4 pop 2 mapi (connector). When I
installed Microsoft Online services sign in, it created a separate
(name@domain) profile for that email, and my admin and MS cannot seem to
give me an answer. They are trying to figure out how to pop to red001
microsoft online.
Thanks
 
I have 6 accounts in the "Outlook" profile. 4 pop 2 mapi (connector). When I
installed Microsoft Online services sign in, it created a separate
(name@domain) profile for that email, and my admin and MS cannot seem to give
me an answer. They are trying to figure out how to pop to red001 microsoft
online.

A mail address does not correspond to a mail profile. Are you saying that if
you start the Mail applet in Control Panel and click Show Profiles that you
see two of them, one for the first six accounts and one for the Microsoft
Online Services? If so, examine how the mail account in the second profile is
defines and then simply create that same account in the first profile.
 
Yes, I am saying that. Since the MS Online Services program automatically
creates a new profile, how can I do that manually inside the other profile?
Thank you.
 
Just to add, we are going from OWA Exchange 2003 to OWA Exchange 2007. Both
versions still there with different passwords, and email spotty at best.
Something about migration and enabling pop on 2007 which I am not 100%
understanding.
Thanks.
 
Just to add, we are going from OWA Exchange 2003 to OWA Exchange 2007. Both
versions still there with different passwords, and email spotty at best.
Something about migration and enabling pop on 2007 which I am not 100%
understanding.

OWA and Outlook are related only by the fact that both can access an Exchange
mailbox. OWA is part of Exchange. Perhaps you'll get a more cogent answer by
asking in microsoft.public.exchange.clients.
 
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