Zoom does not change the actual font size, it simply zooms in or out To transfer Entourage profiles to Outlook for Mac 2016, import profiles data into Outlook 2011 first, and then import Outlook 2011 profile Then Outlook opens a new email whenever you click on a mailto: link in an email or website. In Outlook, click Help > Check For Updates. If an update is found, download and install it. Restart Outlook. If the problem continues, click Help > Contact Support.
I have been a Microsoft Office user on the Mac for nearly 3 years now at my workplace and for the last 6-8 months, I have been plagued by repeated password prompts on Outlook 2016 for my Work Exchange account. The sad part is that it just refuses to connect even after putting in the credentials. It seems to happen mostly when connected on the office network and the older Outlook 2011 app does not suffer from this problem. It seems to be a pretty common issue given the number of threads on the Microsoft support forums.
The issue was not present in the initial releases of the Outlook 2016 app and in the last few releases it has started prompting me with the Office 365 sign in page. The issue seems to stem from a conflict with Keychain access on the recent Mac versions, and the only reliable solution I have found is to delete the Exchange related keychain entries as suggested in this thread.
Open up Mac Keychain tool.
Choose “Login”
Remove *ALL* (delete) references to:
“Exchange”
“Microsoft Office Identities Cache 2”
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“@<something>” that has a type of “MicrosoftOffice15**”
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“Microsoft Office Identities Settings 2”
“MSOpenTEch.ADAL.<something>”
Source: Outlook for Mac 15.x – Repeated password prompts still an issue … – Microsoft Community
Update: Received this tweet from the Outlook for Mac Principal Lead Programmer, Alessio, promising a fix in the 15.31 update in Feb 2017. So, keeping my fingers crossed.
@ab_aditya Keep an eye out for the next update (15.31) in february. We're validating a change that should take care of this issue.
— Alessio Roic (@AlessioR) January 27, 2017
If you are having problems with your email, one common diagnostic aid is a complete list of the message's headers. Headers show the path a message took to get from the sender to the recipient. The IT Service Desk or other technical support may ask you to provide a message's headers.
Your text editor (typically an application called TextEdit) will open, displaying all the headers for the message, followed by the message body.
If you need to copy the headers (to paste somewhere else),
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