![xmission zimbra outlook settings xmission zimbra outlook settings](https://www.zimbra.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/XMISSION-SUCCESS-STORIES-300x162.png)
My company isn't that big, yet.Įverywhere else, the same profile on the same laptop works exactly as expected. Thanks for replying - it won't be related to co-workers. However, I can't think of any setting that would cause a problem at the hotel but not effect Outlook, and not effect Thunderbird at work. If that happens as far as the server is concerned, they are all connecting from the same tcp-ip address. My first thought was that the hotel might have NAT enabled in its router, and several of your co-workers might have already made a connection to the same server.
![xmission zimbra outlook settings xmission zimbra outlook settings](http://img.youtube.com/vi/0dpzs8nkO70/0.jpg)
Tanstaafl wrote:I'm assuming that you are using the same laptop and profile at work and the hotel, and that it has only a Zimbra account. You could enable IMAP logging per but I suspect its not worth the effort as all it would do is verify that the error message was correct. Its useful to know if a problem is account/email provider specific. Or you could add a Gmail IMAP account and see if you have a similar problem. If you do then we at least know the hotel isn't doing something funky, and can think in terms of not at work rather than at hotel. You could take your laptop to some nearby coffee shop or store that provides WiFi and see if you have the same symptoms as at the hotel. I'm assuming that you are using the same laptop and profile at work and the hotel, and that it has only a Zimbra account. It's definitely not the password, keep in mind: Outlook is configured identically to Thunderbird, at least for what is important here. I configured the Zimbra server and it can accept STARTTLS connections on port 143 as well.
#Xmission zimbra outlook settings password
If your password is saved I suggest you write it down and then delete it using tools -> options -> security -> passwords -> saved passwords and restart Thunderbird (since the deleted password is still in memory), to make it easier to troubleshoot. If Outlook 2016 is working fine then you'd want to mimic its account settings as much as possible.ĭo you get a prompt for your password before it fails? If you don't (and you're configured to ask for a password rather than have the password wizard enter it for you) that means its a problem making a tcp-ip connection to the mail server, not a IMAP specific problem.
#Xmission zimbra outlook settings full
igurations it appears that if you use a IMAP account you'd want to select SSL/TLS on port 993 with "normal password", and use your full email address as the username.
![xmission zimbra outlook settings xmission zimbra outlook settings](https://blog.edbmails.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/log-in-to-imap.png)
Tanstaafl wrote:I assume your setup configuration depends upon how your IT dept.