It's happening again. And no, I'm not off my meds, but I'm beginning to wonder if perhaps I should be on some as this stuff is starting to make me feel really crazy. Anyone know their way around the .thunderbird directories well enough to point me toward the likely suspects? First, Comcast apparently configured our rented modem-router in such a way that imap.comcast.net failed in all instances of Thunderbird on different machines in our house. I eventually discovered and adopted the workaround of using imap.ge.xfinity.com (perfectly functional, but with invalid certificate problems, probably due to my lack of knowledge or comprehension or motivation or time to figure it all out.) Next, I purchased our own modem-router and soon discovered that with the new router imap.comcast.net works fine in all instances on different machines in our house. So I set 'em all back to imap.comcast.net recommended defaults. Smooth sailing until... Now, after a couple or three weeks of successful use, I discover that on my wife's machine that both instances of Thunderbird in separate user accounts accounts have stopped downloading emails with imap.comcast.net. Ubuntu MATE 18.04 kicks up little screen messages saying that it can't connect with imap.ge.xfinity.com--which, of course, it shouldn't now be trying to do because server settings in both accounts are configured for imap.comcast.net Where do these gremlins reside and from whence did they come? Is it witchcraft? I put it to the council: Should someone be burned at the stake or is it only a wee misunderstanding?
Hi Tom, I spent a couple of minutes to see if that was easily change-able from command line. However, it looks like Thunderbird wants you to adjust this via the GUI. * Click on the hamburger menu (three horizontal lines that represent a menu, top right of TBird) * Hover over Preferences -> Account Settings * Go to the Comcast email -> Server Settings * Change the server name to: imap.comcast.net * Change the same setting for any other Comcast emails. If there was still no effect, re-open TBird and check again. If it still won't change, then I would remove the IMAP account, and re-add it. Unless you stray from this, then you will not lose any Local Folders, or contacts. * Click on the hamburger menu (three horizontal lines that represent a menu, top right of TBird) * Hover over Preferences -> Account Settings * Click on the Comcast email * Go to Account Actions and select Remove Account * To re-add, Go to Account Actions and select Add Mail Account * Manually configure your email account again. * Repeat for any other Comcast email addresses in your current profile. I don't think TBird really wants you to poke around in the config, unless you're going to backup/restore files. Regards, Jared On 4/17/19 1:16 PM, Tom Ashcraft wrote:
It's happening again. And no, I'm not off my meds, but I'm beginning to wonder if perhaps I should be on some as this stuff is starting to make me feel really crazy.
Anyone know their way around the .thunderbird directories well enough to point me toward the likely suspects?
First, Comcast apparently configured our rented modem-router in such a way that imap.comcast.net failed in all instances of Thunderbird on different machines in our house. I eventually discovered and adopted the workaround of using imap.ge.xfinity.com (perfectly functional, but with invalid certificate problems, probably due to my lack of knowledge or comprehension or motivation or time to figure it all out.)
Next, I purchased our own modem-router and soon discovered that with the new router imap.comcast.net works fine in all instances on different machines in our house. So I set 'em all back to imap.comcast.net recommended defaults. Smooth sailing until...
Now, after a couple or three weeks of successful use, I discover that on my wife's machine that both instances of Thunderbird in separate user accounts accounts have stopped downloading emails with imap.comcast.net. Ubuntu MATE 18.04 kicks up little screen messages saying that it can't connect with imap.ge.xfinity.com--which, of course, it shouldn't now be trying to do because server settings in both accounts are configured for imap.comcast.net
Where do these gremlins reside and from whence did they come? Is it witchcraft? I put it to the council: Should someone be burned at the stake or is it only a wee misunderstanding?
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