

- OUTLOOK 2011 MAC KEEPS ASKING FOR PASSWORD ICLOUD ACCOUNT INSTALL
- OUTLOOK 2011 MAC KEEPS ASKING FOR PASSWORD ICLOUD ACCOUNT UPDATE
OUTLOOK 2011 MAC KEEPS ASKING FOR PASSWORD ICLOUD ACCOUNT INSTALL
Install the Apple Developer tools and use check out Spin Control.app

This process just takes time, between doing the custom build and then using Outlook for an hour to gauge if the SBBoD is bad.īTW - There is a very useful tool for detecting and logging the the spinning ball. So now I am digging into all the parts of our OS X build. I have tested a Vanilla 10.6.8 with SecurityUpdate 2011-006 and all other Apple updates. We are pointing to out internet EWS Exchange servers, and we are using autodiscover (and your AppleScripts) successfully for the setups. At one point we thought recreating the Outlook Identity was going to be the answer, but the SBBoD returned after a few days for all the users we tested.Īll the user home directories are on the boot drive in /Users. The Outlook problem persists with new AD and/or local accounts. We believe this changed something about the way the ocspd interacts with our Outlook Security settings.
OUTLOOK 2011 MAC KEEPS ASKING FOR PASSWORD ICLOUD ACCOUNT UPDATE
The Managed prefs settings where working fine with 10.6.8 until Apple released Security Update 2011-006 in mid October. Users/your521/Library/Preferences/.plist.Īutomating this should be simple with a Casper policy. To fix it all we have to do is delete the plist, and reboot.

So the .plist settings we manage are not really needed anymore. As certs are needed Outlook pulls them down from the LDAP server. We have since instituted a Casper login policy that empties the Outlook certificate cache of our internally issued email certificate. This was to try to get Macs to not use cached/expired certificates in Outlook. We started managing this plist over a year ago. Turns out this managed pref does not "undo" itself when you turn off the MCX settings. I finally got to the root of the problem, with lots of help from lots of people.
