OK sorry, this is not music related but I don't know where else to turn. Does anyone have the foggiest idea of how Microsoft accounts works?
Scenario - I use several http://www.outlook.com mail accounts and I look at these using Microsoft Office Outlook Mail Client
call the accounts account1@outlook.com and account2@outlook.com
Problem - all was well and good until I wanted to change the password on one of the accounts and to do that I have to log in directly to http://www.outlook.com But it refused my password - why I do not know, I have used the same password for years
So I thought ok, I'll just reset the password - I did that, sent for an access code etc, but I was still told the password is wrong
I did however finally get into the account, or so I thought, because when I went to 'reset password', I noted the account details were for the other outlook.com account, even though I had logged in with the credentials for the other account.
Could anyone give me some idea of what's going on?
MS Accounts
Re: MS Accounts
A single Microsoft account can have more than one email associated with it, hence one account, two emails - could it be something like that?
- Rich Hanson
Frequent Poster - Posts: 3686 Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2003 12:00 am Location: Sort of near Rochester, Kent, UK
Re: MS Accounts
I've had this before. It went away when i turned off my VPN. Outlook does seem a bit iffy with VPNs, so if you're running one try disabling whilst you changed passwords.
Last edited by miN2 on Thu Dec 03, 2020 9:14 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: MS Accounts
miN2 wrote:I've had this before. It went away when i turned off my VPN. Outlook does seem a bit iffy with VPNs, so if you're running one try disabling whilst you changed passwords.
That seemed to be the issue, I turned off the vpn and things seem to get back to normal
Re: MS Accounts
The worst thing I have done in computing in recent decades is to start using outlook.com email addresses.
The spam filter is ridiculously aggressive and gives about a 99% false negative rate for me.
As it cannot be turned off I have to manually login on the Web to all 4 accounts weekly to check the spam folders.
As opposed to just relying on my email client to handle everything manually.
I hate Microtoss.
The spam filter is ridiculously aggressive and gives about a 99% false negative rate for me.
As it cannot be turned off I have to manually login on the Web to all 4 accounts weekly to check the spam folders.
As opposed to just relying on my email client to handle everything manually.
I hate Microtoss.
Re: MS Accounts
Agharta wrote:The worst thing I have done in computing in recent decades is to start using outlook.com email addresses.
The spam filter is ridiculously aggressive and gives about a 99% false negative rate for me.
As it cannot be turned off I have to manually login on the Web to all 4 accounts weekly to check the spam folders.
As opposed to just relying on my email client to handle everything manually.
I hate Microtoss.
I feel your pain and the other issue that irritates many people is how logging into outlook.com, you get logged into Skype as well, you can’t seem to decouple from Skype.
I find using Thunderbird mail client is a good mail client for use with outlook.com accounts and I am increasingly using mail.com for mail accounts, it is so uncluttered, has that finesse that many MS products used to have before bloatup became the new black, or remember Google when it first appeared on the scene, simplicity exemplified. Thing is I do some stuff for non-profits and the other users are a tad technophobic otherwise I would ship the accounts across to the mail.com
That said, I used to use uk2.net and had 4 accounts of some 15 years with them, then about 2 years they shut free accounts down. I wanted to use their paid account but couldn’t use the same email addresses, so I swapped all across to outlook.com I want to make my next change the last
Last edited by OneWorld on Sun Dec 06, 2020 9:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.