Hi Greg,
Thank you for the posting. As you indicated you deleted the computer from
the domain and then added the computer back. When you try to start
Outlook, you received the following error message:
"unable to expand your default email folders. You do not have permissions
to logon."
You have created a different profile it will not get passed the message.
This issue can occur if the logon credentials of the Exchange Client or
Outlook are different from the logon credentials of the user logged into
the workstation.
To resolve this problem, log off of the workstation and log back on with
the same user credentials as the Exchange Client or Outlook.
or
1. Remove Named Pipes from the Exchange binding order. See the following
Knowledge Base article for more information on this topic.
163576 XGEN: Changing the RPC Binding Order
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=163576
and
2. After removing Named Pipes from the Exchange binding order, from Control
Panel, double-click Mail. On the Services tab, click Show Profiles, then
click Properties for the profile, then Properties for Exchange Server
service. On the Advanced tab, clear the Use Network Security during Logon
option. This will prevent the Exchange Client from using the cached
credentials used to log into the workstation initially.
NOTE: If Named Pipes is listed in the Exchange Client binding order as the
primary protocol, the logon credentials will be used regardless of the Use
Network Security setting. This is documented in the following Knowledge
Base article:
146188 XCLN: Use Network Security Option Not Working as Expected
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=146188
In addition, this issue can occur when you do not have the correct NTFS
file system permissions on the Exchsrvr folder on the Exchange Server
computer.
To resolve this issue, grant permissions to Everyone on the Exchsrvr folder:
1. Start User Manager for Domains on the Exchange Server computer.
2. Click Policies, and then click User Rights.
3. Under Right, click "Access this computer from the network".
4. Click Add.
5. Click Everyone, click Add, and then click OK.
6. Click OK to apply the changes.
More Information:
If the Exchange Server computer is a domain controller, you can also try to
connect to the Netlogon share from a client to see if the user can connect
to the server. From a command prompt on the client computer, type the
following command:
"net use \\<servername>\netlogon" (without the quotation marks)
The user does not have access to connect to the server if the following
error message appears:
System error 1385 has occurred.
Logon failure: the user has not been granted the requested logon type at
this computer.
Hope the above information and suggestion helps and answers your question.
If anything is unclear, please let me know.
Sincerely,
Cherry Qian
MCSE2000, MCSA2000, MCDBA2000
Microsoft Partner Online Support
Get Secure! -
www.microsoft.com/security
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