07.04.2020

Microsoft Exchange For Mac

A Microsoft Exchange account is a work or school email account. The organization that gave you the Exchange email account is running a Microsoft Exchange Server, or is using Office 365 which uses Exchange Server to provide email. Connect to the Exchange Server using a Mac. Set up with Microsoft Outlook. 'exchange.nmu.edu' in the 'Server Address' field.

Lot of Mac users reported issue with OS X Yosemite mail. Some of the Microsoft Exchange emails are not sync with mail. Mail or content of the mail not appears (blank mail) .
So how to fix this exchange email sync problem?
Solution 1: Rebuild Mailbox

  1. Open Mail app and click the inbox folder.
  2. At the top of the screen, choose Mailbox. Select the :Rebuild” option at the bottom of the dropdown list.
  3. It take some time to rebuild your Mail box depending on size of the exchange mailbox.

Solution 2: Maintain or set 5000 messages per mail.
Microsoft recommends 5000 messages per Exchange mailbox. So set 5000 message per mail. Move the message into other folders.
Solution 3: Disable some settings

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  1. In Mail app. go to Preferences -> [Exchange Account] -> Advanced and disable or uncheck the check box “Automatically detect and maintain account settings”.
  2. In Mail app. go to Preferences -> [Exchange Account] -> Outgoing Mail server and select edit SMTP server list from the dropdown -> Advanced. Disable or uncheck “Automatically detect and maintain account settings”.
  3. Restart the Mail app.

Microsoft Exchange Server Address For Mac

If you your want new mails show up timely, under General change the Default from 5 minutes to 1 minute.
Other Fixes:- Mac microsoft office trial 2010.

  1. Switch on and off automatic discovery (temporary solution).
  2. Delete all exchange account in Apple menu -> System Preferences -> Internet Accounts. Quit Mail app. Relaunch Mail app and go to Preferences -> Accounts. With in mail, setup the Exchange account (Not from system Preferences). After you setup mail account, go to Advanced and uncheck “Automatically detect and maintain settings”.

If you knew any other solutions for Microsoft exchange email sync issue, inform us via comment.

The following table provides information and tips for entering basic Microsoft Exchange account settings in the Outlook Accounts preferences.

Option

Description

Account description

This is how your account is labeled in Outlook. You can give account any name that is helpful to you.

Full name

This is how your name appears in the From field of e-mail messages that you send.

E-mail address

You must type your complete e-mail address, such as someone@example.com.

Method

The administrator of your Exchange account determines the kind of authentication that your organization uses. When you set up your account in Outlook, select the authentication method that is used by your organization, either User Name and Password or Kerberos authentication.

User name

This is usually your domain name followed by a backslash and your account ID. For example, if your domain is 'example' and your account ID is 'someone,' you type examplesomeone. Frequently, the account ID is the part of your e-mail address before the '@' symbol, and the domain is the part of your e-mail address after the '@' symbol. However, this is not always true.

For some accounts, your user name is your complete e-mail address.

Password

This is the password for your Exchange account, which is usually case-sensitive.

Kerberos ID

Depending on how your Exchange server is configured, you may already see one or more Kerberos IDs to select from. Or, click the Kerberos ID pop-up menu, and then click Create a New ID.

Important: When you create a new ID in Mac OS X v10.5 (Leopard) or earlier, you are asked for your name, password, and realm. Realm is another name for a 'domain.' In the Authenticate to Kerberos dialog box, in the Name field, enter your Account ID. This is sometimes the part of your e-mail address before the '@' symbol. In the Realm field, you must enter the domain name in all uppercase letters, such as '.COM'.