> The technician suggested either buy a certificate or use Thunderbird.
lol.
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E-mail: lowtru...@lowtrucks.net
Web site: http://lowtrucks.net/
Current version is 7.1 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
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Thursday, July 21, 2016, 12:20:17 PM, you wrote:
> Thursday, July 21, 2016, 2:03:15 AM, you wrote:
>>> The error messages is clear, but where do I find the certificate so
>>> that I can see what is actually in there?
>> try this:
>> go to Options/S/MIME and TLS... and set Microsoft CryptoAPI
Thursday, July 21, 2016, 2:03:15 AM, you wrote:
>> The error messages is clear, but where do I find the certificate so
>> that I can see what is actually in there?
> try this:
> go to Options/S/MIME and TLS... and set Microsoft CryptoAPI.
Thanks for the suggestion. Now the error
> The error messages is clear, but where do I find the certificate so
> that I can see what is actually in there?
try this:
go to Options/S/MIME and TLS... and set Microsoft CryptoAPI.
--
E-mail: lowtru...@lowtrucks.net
Web site: http://lowtrucks.net/
___
Hi
On Wednesday 20 July 2016 at 5:07:01 PM, in
, Adrian Godfrey wrote:
> The error messages is clear, but where do I find
> the certificate so
> that I can see what is actually in there?
Possibly in your "Intermediate CA" address book? I have certificates
there for a couple of my email pr
The error messages is clear, but where do I find the certificate so
that I can see what is actually in there?
SEND - This certificate is self-issued.
SEND - TLS handshake failure. The server host name ("smtp.xxx.xxx") does not
match the certificate.
I don't get any warnings about the certi
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