microsoftacct, and Outlook16. My problem is what steps to take and in what order to perform them in to verify this I must pick a differant email address and be able to verify it in new microsoft ,thats been created with the wrong email add.been struggling with this for 3+ weeks? any help will be greatly appreciate. Thank You
This means wiping the computer and reloading Windows to a new state. You would need to reinstall Office again and setup your account. This will be easy if you have the key and Office software to reinstall with.
To give you time to tell your friends about your new Gmail address, we'll forward messages sent to your other account for 30 days. We'll display your new Gmail address for 60 days, or until you delete the reminder.
Tip: If you're still getting emails, check if automatic forwarding is set up in your other account, then do a search on how to turn it off in your other account. If you want to delete emails that were already imported, learn how to delete them.
GitHub uses your commit email address to associate commits with your account on GitHub.com. You can choose the email address that will be associated with the commits you push from the command line as well as web-based Git operations you make.
Note: You cannot verify email addresses from disposable email address services (services that allow you to receive email at a temporary address that expires after a certain time). If you'd like to keep your email address private, you can use a GitHub-provided noreply email address. For more information, see "Setting your commit email address."
To use your noreply email address for commits you push from the command line, use that email address when you set your commit email address in Git. To use your noreply address for web-based Git operations, set your commit email address on GitHub and choose to Keep my email address private.
You can also choose to block commits you push from the command line that expose your personal email address. For more information, see "Blocking command line pushes that expose your personal email address."
To ensure that commits are attributed to you and appear in your contributions graph, use an email address that is connected to your account on GitHub.com, or the noreply email address provided to you in your email settings. For more information, see "Adding an email address to your GitHub account."
Note: If you created your account on GitHub.com after July 18, 2017, your noreply email address for GitHub is an ID number and your username in the form of
ID+US...@users.noreply.github.com. If you created your account on GitHub.com prior to July 18, 2017, and enabled Keep my email address private prior to that date, your noreply email address from GitHub is
USER...@users.noreply.github.com. You can get an ID-based noreply email address for GitHub by selecting (or deselecting and reselecting) Keep my email address private in your email settings.
If you use your noreply email address for GitHub to make commits and then change your username, those commits will not be associated with your account on GitHub.com. This does not apply if you're using the ID-based noreply address from GitHub. For more information, see "Changing your GitHub username."
If you haven't enabled email address privacy, you can choose which verified email address to author changes with when you edit, delete, or create files or merge a pull request on GitHub. If you enabled email address privacy, then the commit author email address cannot be changed and will be a no-reply by default. For more information about the exact form the no-reply email address can take, see "Setting your commit email address."
You can use the git config command to change the email address you associate with your Git commits. The new email address you set will be visible in any future commits you push to GitHub.com from the command line. Any commits you made prior to changing your commit email address are still associated with your previous email address.
Add the email address to your account on GitHub, so that your commits are attributed to you and appear in your contributions graph. For more information, see "Adding an email address to your GitHub account."
You can change the email address associated with commits you make in a single repository. This will override your global Git configuration settings in this one repository, but will not affect any other repositories.
M365 BP makes more sense to me, since you get more for your buck overall. The inclusion of Intune and the ability to curate what apps are allowed on those remote PCs right from the Windows OoBE is a time saver.
Based on the description of the issue, it is likely that the problem is related to how user accounts are set up in Microsoft 365 Business Standard. This subscription provides cloud-based services like email, file storage, and collaboration tools, but they are not tied to a local domain controller like a traditional on-premises network setup.
To enable users to log in to their laptops using their work email addresses, it is necessary to set up Azure AD Connect. This tool helps synchronize your on-premises directory with Azure AD, the identity and access management service used by Microsoft 365. Once this is done, users should be able to log in to their laptops using their work email address and access Microsoft 365 apps and services without needing to sign in separately.
However, if the issue persists even after setting up Azure AD Connect, there may be a problem with the way user accounts are set up in Microsoft 365. In such cases, it is recommended to contact Microsoft support for further assistance.
It is worth noting that backing up your data in Microsoft 365 is crucial. While Microsoft provides robust security measures and backups, they are not foolproof, and data loss can still occur due to accidental deletion, malware, or other issues.
Therefore, it is important to implement a comprehensive backup strategy that includes regular backups of your Microsoft 365 data. This ensures that you can recover your data in the event of any unforeseen issues, and it also helps meet regulatory compliance requirements for data protection.
I'm trying to use Onedrive and Onenote, but it seems to be really terrible 50% of the time. Sometimes when I log on my pc, it says I have to log in, and in doing so, is stuck on a "signing in" loop, until it says some error code about me not having an internet connection.
Here's what I've tried:
1. Close and open Onedrive
2. Removing auth from the pc and adding it again
3. Reinstalling Onedrive
4. Change Wi-Fi
5. Do a /reset in Windows run AND cmd
6. Update drivers
7. Install the newest Onedrive from the website
8. Try the app-version found in Windows Store
What am I supposed to do? I don't want to restart my pc every time it doesn't work, that's a terrible fix.
Clear OneDrive cached credentials:
Navigate to Control Panel > User Accounts > Credential Manager > Windows Credentials.
Check for any "OneDrive" credentials and remove them.
Unlink your account:
Right-click the OneDrive icon, go to Settings > Account, select "Unlink this PC," and then "Unlink this account". Afterward, sign in again to check if the issue persists.
Firewall and Antivirus Settings:
Check your firewall and antivirus settings to make sure they are not blocking OneDrive's connection. Temporarily disable them and see if the issue persists.
Delete the existing local OneDrive folder:
After uninstalling OneDrive, you could try deleting the existing local OneDrive folder and then reinstall the OneDrive App.
If none of these steps work, it might be best to reach out to Microsoft Support directly for further assistance.
For over a year now, my business OneDrive will randomly hang on 'Signing In' and like you, I've tried everything that might keep this from happening. I've never had this issue with my personal OneDrive (on the same system).
To regain access, from the task bar icon, open OneDrive settings, go to 'Account' and click 'Unlink this PC', then 'Quit OneDrive'. Reopen the OneDrive app and sign in. Follow the setup process and when it tells you the default folder already exists, click 'Use This Folder' and complete the remaining steps. It will then perform a full sync.
A while back, when I would go to sign in, I would get blocked by an initial dialog saying my account already existed, so instead of entering my actual email address, I would enter a fake email address, but with the same domain (bob2@ rather than bob@). That would get me past that dialog and to the Microsoft account screen where I could sign in using my actual email address. I haven't had to do that in a while, so maybe they got that part fixed at least.
I am having this issue with my personal OneDrive (works) and university OneDrive (is hung up on "signing in"). In the past different combinations of closing OneDrive and unlinking / relinking have worked, occasionally I've had to reinstall which is not ideal because it I have to resync my sharepoint folders and remove old ones. Trying to follow these steps to avoid reinstalling - I unlinked my university account and closed OneDrive. When I reopen OneDrive its opening the personal account version (there's only one app listed in my apps, though when both are running I've got ta grey cloud and a blue cloud in the taskbar). I tried to add a new account in OneDrive (using my university login), pointed to the old university onedrive folder, and that works but in the next step its saying that before I can back up my folders in OneDrive (university version) I need to turn off backups for my personal account. That seems problematic... Is there a different way to link, or to tell it I'm going to run two OneDrive accounts at once in a way that will work? @kcCodeMonkey your instructions seemed like the closest fit for my issue so hoping you have insight.
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