![]() After AT&T advised that my att.net address would follow me if I enrolled with T-Mobile home internet I was skeptical. I want to post an update to my situation of leaving AT&T internet and thus losing my email address and all of my Thunderbird email/contacts/folders. I think it’s great that your old AT&T email can follow you, but is that really guaranteed long term? In my case I would have had to pay for the old email account as I no longer had internet service with that company.Īnd yes, Thunderbird gets the job done for me! Thumbs up! Once I was confident that I wouldn’t risk being cut off from any important account recovery emails, I pulled the plug on the old email provider. Then I left the old ISP email downloads running for a couple more years to see if I had missed anything. It took me quite a while until I had completely notified all of my contacts, updated all of my various website accounts, bank accounts, and other business relationships of the change. In the interim, I set up my desktop email program to get mail from both providers as I transitioned to the new one. Once I had made the decision on using Gmail as my primary email provider, I set up that account and started using that new email address exclusively going forward. So I took a look at Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo. I wanted to be free to use any ISP without having to fiddle with switching email providers again as well. I decided to break off from my Earthlink ISP email service years before I actually made the switch to a non-ISP email provider. Make adjustments as needed to match those indicated by T-Mobile. Then click on ‘server settings’ also in the wide grey column. Near the bottom of the wide grey column at left, click on ‘account settings’. In Thunderbird, click on ‘settings’ (the little box in upper left corner of screen for newest updates). Those settings must be matched exactly in Thunderbird or any other email app you choose to use. Alternatively, Google ‘T-Mobile email settings’ or something like that. Either log on to T-Mobile and there should be some kind of ’email settings’ page. If one doesn’t work, the other likely will.įor Thunderbird, the first step is to determine what ISP settings are needed for email. So use either ‘auto detect’ or ‘use system’. ![]() It’s unlikely you have some kind of ‘special’ proxy needs. Scroll down to the bottom and select ‘network settings’. On the Firefox dropdown menu at the far right top, click ‘settings’. In Firefox, you may or may not need to change anything. ![]() There is no guarantee that your mobile phone’s automatic settings will work.Changing ISPs with Firefox and Thunderbird is easy. Note: When setting up email on a mobile phone, all account details must be entered manually. User Name/Account Name: Address: incoming server (IMAP) enter .įor outgoing server (SMTP) enter ![]() Use the following information to set up your mobile phone’s built-in email client to send and receive email, being your domain hosted by one.com:.In the appropriate fields, enter the email address and the password that you use to log in to Webmail.In your mobile phone’s menu, go to the settings for email accounts.Make sure to check our device-specific guides to see if there is one for your phone.ĭon't have an email address yet? With our email hosting solution, you can mail professionally with your domain to all your contacts. In this guide, we show how to set up an email account with one.com on your mobile phone. ![]()
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