The reason why the "domain" dialog area is greyed out when you
initiate a UPN logon is that it is ignored.  The domain info is
derived from your UPN.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> The reason I ask is because a user has been logging on with the [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> and local machine and has been having problems with outlook (exchange), but when 
> logged into the domain all is well. It makes sense to me, but not for a particular 
> reason. Any info is much appreciated. Thanks
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In all likelihood, this represents a different problem.

What version of Outlook and Exchange?


-ASB
http://tinyurl.com/ghwv



On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 10:43:26 -0400, Douglas M. Long <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> OK, this may be a stupid question, but here it goes. 
> 
>  
> 
> If I login to a client machine with username and domain how does that differ from 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] and local machine. My suspicion is that when logging in locally 
> with the UPN (is that the correct term) that a ticket is only granted at the time an 
> application needs some credentials, whereas logging into the domain grabs a ticket 
> immediately. Is this correct thinking?
> 
>  
> 
> The reason I ask is because a user has been logging on with the [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> and local machine and has been having problems with outlook (exchange), but when 
> logged into the domain all is well. It makes sense to me, but not for a particular 
> reason. Any info is much appreciated. Thanks
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