Hi, @Lovignite
Thanks for posting to the Community Forums.
I understand you want your outgoing mail to your customers to state your custom domain. If you only have email forwarding enabled, and don't have a custom email associated with your domain, you would not be able to send mail from exa...@yourstorename.com.
I'm wondering how my gmail knows about passwords from other sites.I was initially thinking this was what happened when you signed up for a website with the option that says "sign up with google" but this can't be the case because even passwords for other email addresses are stored and passwords for sites that don't use a gmail account as the username.
NOTE: I'm using Brave Browser which is a chromium based alternate to Chrome that tries to block ads and trackers (I use it because It's interface is like chrome but doesn't use as much of my cpu, I had problems with chrome cpu usage)
I'm having an issue where I can't access pretty much any of my google services on my Samsung Galaxy S7 edge (running Android 6.0.1 currently). I don't have general internet connectivity issues as my wifi and mobile connections are fine and other apps are running without issue.
My google account information doesn't seem to be the problem as I've successfully signed into the account on my PC and even on my phone through my web browser, it's just the apps which are a problem.
When I try refreshing my gmail account, I get a system notification saying login failed. When I click that message, the phone tries to take me to a screen which says "Enter account information" at the top, but the rest of the screen is blank white.
I also have another system notification saying Account Action Required for my gmail account but when I click that one, it takes me to a Google Play screen where it says "Checking info" but immediately closes. When I go to Google Play manually, I get the same screen then it asks me to choose an account. My existing account is listed but when I select it, I just keep getting taken back to the same screen asking me to select an account. If I choose add account, I get an error message stating "Couldn't sign in. There was a problem connecting to accounts.google.com"
So to preface this: I actually had this happen to me all the time, and I eventually was able to purposefully recreate it and figure out what was going on. This was my solution; hopefully it helps you, too.
That said, my problem was in fact with my hosts file. Since you said you weren't able to access yours, I believe that might still be the case. Rather than attempt to root your phone immediately, my first suggestion is to look at any apps you might have recently installed and used that may have caused the problem. In particular, ad blockers often try to circumvent ads by redirecting web addresses to localhost. Another possible redirect is billing and license verification. If you've tried using an app for any of those purposes, see if you can undo the changes in said app.
Next up, if that's not the problem: rooting. Not an easy process and, because I probably legally need to, I AM NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ILL EFFECTS DUE TO ATTEMPTING TO ROOT YOUR PHONE. ROOTING IS DANGEROUS AND WILL VOID YOUR WARRANTY. PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK.That out of the way, the most important thing to remember when rooting your phone is to get software that matches your exact phone model and carrier. If it doesn't, just don't. You'll save yourself a lot of headache. ...there are a million and a half guides on rooting, so I won't reinvent the wheel here, but in general, the process is: find a custom recovery for your model/carrier > flash custom recovery with a computer program called Odin > download su.zip > flash su.zip with custom recovery. Some devices may require a preliminary step called unlocking the bootloader... Google around for your phone, you can figure it out... Now on to the fix!
My particular problem was a redirect of android.clients.google.com. It sounds like your problem might be similar (accounts.google.com). Once you're rooted, use ES File Explorer to open either /etc/hosts or /system/etc/hosts in text edit mode. Search for the suspect line, and delete the whole line! It should look something like:
@Bhaskar_Mukka Out property(MailMessages) of Get IMAP mail messages stores all your mails in list format(In Your case AllEmails variable contains mails is list format[Type will be System.Net.Mail.Message) only no need assign again to new list variable), After that you can use for each activity to get individual mail. Anyway why your using assign statement? any specific reason.
Hi,
AS @Manjuts90 said you have to use For Each activity. since the output mails are stored in a list you cannot directly assign those to a variable. If you want to get the subject of each mail,
But I am trying to Create a Bot which should get triggered when a mail with a specific subject line is received in Inbox. I have gone through the link Option Strict On disallows late binding
from Mr.RishiVC1 he was doing the same using Outlook.
@Bhaskar_Mukka instead of giving decision box give for each loop, inside loop with if condition check whether each mail subject contains ur required string, and if required string is present do ur activities, after for each activity give flow back to get mail messages activity. remove flow decision from ur current workflow.
@Bhaskar_Mukka Assign true value to boolean variable inside then part part if statement. Again looping back to Get imap mail messages activity check the condition of boolean variable if it is false go back to get imap mail messages activity, if it is false give give appropriate action u want to take.
From receiving important notifications to communicating with your customers, email is an important part of any business. This page includes information on how to set up and configure both your store owner email and your sender email.
The store contact address is the email address that you used when you signed up for Shopify. If you export your products, orders, or customers list, then they're sent to your store contact email address.
The sender email is your customer-facing address. It's where your customers can contact you directly, and it's the address that's associated with the automatic notification emails that they receive about their orders.
Add a DMARC policy and Shopify's CNAME records to your domain to connect to the Shopify Sender Policy Framework (SPF) and Domain Keys Identified Mail (DKIM) records to ensure that your email message is delivered to your customer.
By default, the store contact address is the email address that you use when you sign up for Shopify. The store contact address is what Shopify uses to contact you, and where you receive your files when you export your product, order, or customer lists. If you want Shopify to contact you at a new email address, then you can update that information.
As of February 1, 2024, Gmail and Yahoo require you to authenticate your domain and have a DMARC record in order to send emails to customers from a branded email address. If you take no action, then your sender email is rewritten to stor...@shopifyemail.com to meet the minimum requirements so that you can continue sending emails to your customers without interruption. The string of numbers (123) in the default email stor...@shopifyemail.com is unique to your store.
The sender email is your customer-facing email address. This is the email address that's displayed in the From field when your customers receive automatic notification emails, order confirmation emails, and any marketing emails sent from Shopify. Some domains might require additional authentication, otherwise your sender email address might display with via shopifyemail.com, or as stor...@shopifyemail.com.
If you have a Shopify-managed custom domain, then you can use a forwarding email address from your custom domain as the Sender email from your store. Set up email forwarding to create a custom email address associated with your domain for your customers to contact.
After you've set up forwarding, change your Sender email to your newly created forwarding email address. When you change your sender email, customers receive your store notifications from the forwarding email associated with your custom domain. If they reply to your store's emails, then their message forwards to the personal email you configured in your email forwarding settings.
If you use a third-party domain, then you need to authenticate your sender email address to prevent your emails messages from being flagged as spam, and to ensure that your email messages are delivered to your customers.
To authenticate your sender email address, you need to add the following records to your third-party domain to connect to the Shopify Sender Policy Framework (SPF) and Domain Keys Identified Mail (DKIM) records:
Changes can take up to 24 hours to complete. If the domain verification fails, then verify that the DNS records that you entered into your third-party domain provider match the records that were provided in your Shopify admin.
The following steps provided are general steps to add a DMARC record to your domain, and the example DMARC record provided includes only the minimum requirements. Before you add a DMARC record to your third-party domain, review the DMARC requirements from your domain provider.
For example, if you own the domain name johns-apparel.com, then you can create the sender email address in...@johns-apparel.com. When customers email in...@johns-apparel.com, their messages are forwarded to your connected personal account, for example, jo...@gmail.com.
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