Just wondering. Looked at the original outlook setup info, and it mentioned having to change a setting to enable the pop3 setup. Think gmail did the same thing. Original setup only allowed access via web, until you went in an changed the setting to allow the pop3 and smtp.
Not very happy with Microsoft setup with the outlook. Got a little HP notebook that has windows 11 and it required an outlook.com account to setup. But I can get into the email, but when I try some things it comes up with message that it is going to send message to my phone, but never get any messages, and it gives no other options, so can never enter the code that it is suppose to send.
Don't know if it is something broken that it doesn't support the guam 671 area code. Guam is part of US Dialing plan, but have run into a number of things that don't seem to work with it. Paypal did, but then it stopped, so had to disable feature. My Capital One card would not work, so had to create one of those dummy text phone numbers, to get code, and was able to setup the app that authenticates with something other than SMS text. So seem less secure that a dummy text number works, but not a real number to phone?
Just wondering. Looked at the original outlook setup info, and it mentioned having to change a setting to enable the pop3 setup. Think gmail did the same thing. Original setup only allowed access via web, until you went in an changed the setting to allow the pop3 and smtp.
Not very happy with Microsoft setup with the outlook. Got a little HP notebook that has windows 11 and it required an outlook.com account to setup. But I can get into the email, but when I try some things it comes up with message that it is going to send message to my phone, but never get any messages, and it gives no other options, so can never enter the code that it is suppose to send.
Don't know if it is something broken that it doesn't support the guam 671 area code. Guam is part of US Dialing plan, but have run into a number of things that don't seem to work with it. Paypal did, but then it stopped, so had to disable feature. My Capital One card would not work, so had to create one of those dummy text phone numbers, to get code, and was able to setup the app that authenticates with something other than SMS text. So seem less secure that a dummy text number works, but not a real number to phone?