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#1
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Hi all,
I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send email from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark |
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#2
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Which mail account type are you using?
I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. What makes you think that? Are you actually using 2 different accounts or just a single one with additional addresses assigned to it? Note that if you are going to specify a SMTP server from a different domain, you'll have to enable and configure authentication for it. See http://www.msoutlook.info/question/36 -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message ... Hi all, I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark |
#3
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Robert,
I'm at the same office, going through a router/modem and using our local ISP as the outgoing mail server. Comparing the two accounts: Under "User Information", "Your Name" is the same; "E-mail Address" are different. Under "Server Information", "Account Type" are both pop3; "Incoming mail server" are different; "Outgoing mail server (SMTP)" are the same -- that is, our local ISP's SMTP setting. Under "Logon Information" the two accounts are different -- different "User Name" and "Password" per respective incoming mail server; "Remember password" is checked for both accounts. Under "Internet E-mail Settings/Outgoing Server" the settings are the same -- same username/password as specified by our ISP; "Remember password" is checked for both accounts. I've just noticed that hitting "Reply" to an email that arrived via the second (non-default) account results in the same problem as trying to send a new email message from that second account -- repetitive popups for username/password and with nothing successful. Thank you for further suggestions. Mark -- Mark "Roady [MVP]" wrote: Which mail account type are you using? I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. What makes you think that? Are you actually using 2 different accounts or just a single one with additional addresses assigned to it? Note that if you are going to specify a SMTP server from a different domain, you'll have to enable and configure authentication for it. See http://www.msoutlook.info/question/36 -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message ... Hi all, I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark . |
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"Mark" wrote in message
... I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? If the two mailboxes are supplied by the same mail service provvider, then they'll likely have the same incoming and outgoing servers. If the service providers are different, then both the incoming and outgoing servers will be different. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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So to recap;
Account 1 address: POP: pop.domain1.com SMTP: smtp.yourisp.com Account 2 address: POP: pop.domain2.com SMTP: smtp.yourisp.com If that is correct, then you'll have to provide a separate authentication to the smtp server of your ISP as you probably cannot login using the same credentials as for your POP3 servers. This is typical when the POP3 and SMTP servers are not located on the same domain. Ask your ISP which credentials you should use to authenticate against their SMTP server. They can also set their SMTP configuration to trust your network so no authentication would be needed. This is usually only done when this ISP also is the one providing you with Internet access and not just a mailbox or domain name service. -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message news ![]() Robert, I'm at the same office, going through a router/modem and using our local ISP as the outgoing mail server. Comparing the two accounts: Under "User Information", "Your Name" is the same; "E-mail Address" are different. Under "Server Information", "Account Type" are both pop3; "Incoming mail server" are different; "Outgoing mail server (SMTP)" are the same -- that is, our local ISP's SMTP setting. Under "Logon Information" the two accounts are different -- different "User Name" and "Password" per respective incoming mail server; "Remember password" is checked for both accounts. Under "Internet E-mail Settings/Outgoing Server" the settings are the same -- same username/password as specified by our ISP; "Remember password" is checked for both accounts. I've just noticed that hitting "Reply" to an email that arrived via the second (non-default) account results in the same problem as trying to send a new email message from that second account -- repetitive popups for username/password and with nothing successful. Thank you for further suggestions. Mark -- Mark "Roady [MVP]" wrote: Which mail account type are you using? I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. What makes you think that? Are you actually using 2 different accounts or just a single one with additional addresses assigned to it? Note that if you are going to specify a SMTP server from a different domain, you'll have to enable and configure authentication for it. See http://www.msoutlook.info/question/36 -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message ... Hi all, I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark . |
#6
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Roady,
Thanks for the response and for taking the time in your recap to more clearly explain my setup. Yes, your recap is correct. I'm not very knowledgeable about email stuff and am still confused after your advice. I thought POP3 had to do with the incoming mail server(s) and SMTP(s) had to do with the outgoing mail server(s). What's confusing is why the SMTP info I'm providing in the second email account is not allowing the email to be sent. Doesn't the email account we have with our ISP determine the username/password to use when sending email? Isn't this username/password the credentials needed to authenticate against their SMTP server? I'm probably just not understanding the whole thing. Without changing a single thing in either of these two accounts, I can delete either one and everything works fine. Keeping both accounts, however -- and it doesn't matter which one is made the default -- results in the second account not being able to send mail (even though it allows retrieval of email from the specified source listed in that account). Since both accounts use the same SMTP server for outgoing mail, how come it authenticates for the default email account, but not for the second? Sorry for being so dense! -- Mark "Roady [MVP]" wrote: So to recap; Account 1 address: POP: pop.domain1.com SMTP: smtp.yourisp.com Account 2 address: POP: pop.domain2.com SMTP: smtp.yourisp.com If that is correct, then you'll have to provide a separate authentication to the smtp server of your ISP as you probably cannot login using the same credentials as for your POP3 servers. This is typical when the POP3 and SMTP servers are not located on the same domain. Ask your ISP which credentials you should use to authenticate against their SMTP server. They can also set their SMTP configuration to trust your network so no authentication would be needed. This is usually only done when this ISP also is the one providing you with Internet access and not just a mailbox or domain name service. -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message news ![]() Robert, I'm at the same office, going through a router/modem and using our local ISP as the outgoing mail server. Comparing the two accounts: Under "User Information", "Your Name" is the same; "E-mail Address" are different. Under "Server Information", "Account Type" are both pop3; "Incoming mail server" are different; "Outgoing mail server (SMTP)" are the same -- that is, our local ISP's SMTP setting. Under "Logon Information" the two accounts are different -- different "User Name" and "Password" per respective incoming mail server; "Remember password" is checked for both accounts. Under "Internet E-mail Settings/Outgoing Server" the settings are the same -- same username/password as specified by our ISP; "Remember password" is checked for both accounts. I've just noticed that hitting "Reply" to an email that arrived via the second (non-default) account results in the same problem as trying to send a new email message from that second account -- repetitive popups for username/password and with nothing successful. Thank you for further suggestions. Mark -- Mark "Roady [MVP]" wrote: Which mail account type are you using? I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. What makes you think that? Are you actually using 2 different accounts or just a single one with additional addresses assigned to it? Note that if you are going to specify a SMTP server from a different domain, you'll have to enable and configure authentication for it. See http://www.msoutlook.info/question/36 -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message ... Hi all, I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark . . |
#7
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Brian,
Thanks for the response. Please see my reply to Roady, above. That should help demonstrate my confusion about all this. I'm getting email from my personal email account (mailbox?), as well as from my corporate email account (my corporate mailbox?). I pay for my personal mailbox; corporate pays for the corporate mailbox. I use our local ISP in our office for sending email. -- or, at least this was how I was understanding it. -- Mark "Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: "Mark" wrote in message ... I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? If the two mailboxes are supplied by the same mail service provvider, then they'll likely have the same incoming and outgoing servers. If the service providers are different, then both the incoming and outgoing servers will be different. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] . |
#8
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guys, thanks for your help. I apologize, but it seems to have been a password
problem for that second account. -- Mark "Mark" wrote: Hi all, I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send email from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark |
#9
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Good to hear you've got it solved! :-)
-- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Mark" wrote in message ... guys, thanks for your help. I apologize, but it seems to have been a password problem for that second account. -- Mark "Mark" wrote: Hi all, I set up two email accounts in Outlook 2007. Clicking the Send/Receive button successfully downloads email from both accounts. I can only send from the default account, however. If I try to send from the second account I'm prompted for username/password and even though the boxes by default have the same smtp info as my primary account it just keeps popping up the box prompting me for username/password -- even if I hit cancel. I thought that both accounts would use the same outgoing mail server; just different incoming servers. I would like email sent from the second account to have this second account's email address that recipients would respond to. What am I missing? Thank you, Mark |
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