For security reason, Microsoft has deprecated the use of SHA-1. Learn more; Starting with the 16.17 release in September 2018, this information also applies to Office 2019 for Mac, which is a version of Office for Mac that’s available as a one-time purchase from. In Outlook, click Help > Check For Updates. If an update is found, download and install it. Restart Outlook. If the problem continues, click Help > Contact Support. I want to know if it's possible to disable the warning you get in Chrome when you try to go to some HTTPS site that doesn't have a trusted certificate. I have a few sites in my bookmarks that use HTTPS but none of them have trusted certificates, so each time I visit them I manually have to click 'Proceed anyway' in the warning and it's getting. Trusted sites Chrome on Mac Showing 1-4 of 4 messages. Trusted sites Chrome on Mac. Double-click on the certificate file (should be named hostname + '.cer'), and it will open in Keychain. Restart Chrome & you should no longer get a non-trusted site error; Let me know! Dane; Re: Trusted sites Chrome on Mac: Joseph Handschu. Getting Chrome to accept self-signed localhost certificate. To allow the self signed certificates to be FULLY trusted in Chrome and Safari, you need to import a new certificate authority into your Mac. (x86) Google Chrome Application chrome.exe' --ignore-certificate-errors – mik-t Jul 15 '13 at 13:52. @jww Please do not flag. The latest Chrome update adds a stringent security feature which can prompt certificate warnings when accessing internal sites. How to resolve SSL certificate warnings produced by the latest. Chrome ignore certificate errors for trusted sites, mac. If you ignore certificate errors then you might as well not use SSL at all because any man-in-the-middle can craft a fake SSL certificate and your browser will accept it. Hello, Please could I have assistance with an authentication issue we are experiencing. Since replacing our staff laptops we are frequenctly having 802.1X problems. I'm not sure where the problem lies at the moment but the laptops in question use the Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6235 wireless chipset, and 15.6.1 driver. The main issue appears to when laptops resume from sleep/hibernating don't always machine authenticate. So they are connected to our wireless, but are put our deny_all role. I can see they have user authenticated, but the lack of machine authentication seems to be the problem. Our wireless settings are set by Group Policy, and the laptops are all Windows 7 x64. I'm following this up with Samsung and our wireless installer but was hoping by making this post it might highlight some areas to invesitgate we hadn't thought of. I'm not very familar with the advanced 802.1x settings for example in the GPO. Thanks in advance. When systems resume from sleep; they do not attempt machine authentication; only user authentication. This is by design on Windows. In your dot1X profile, what is the machine cache timeout set at? This can be found on the Advanced tab of the 802.1X Authentication Profile; 'Machine Authentication Cache Timeout'. This dictates how long the MAC address is cached in the internal dtabase upon successful machine authentication. If set too low, you'll likely see improper role assignment due to the machine not authenticating. Because these are new laptops, I would also make sure that they are doing both user and machine authentication as well (whether by GPO or manual settings). As a test, on these same systems, if you restart them, do they get placed in the proper roles? If they do, then your cache timeout is likely the issue. If they do not, the system is likely not set to use both machine and user authentication. Note: Don't see the Export button? Make sure you have the latest version of Outlook. On the Outlook Help menu, click Check for Updates. If all Outlook updates are applied and you still don't see the Export button, look for Export on the Outlook File menu. • In the Export to Archive File (.olm) box, check the items you want to export, and choose Continue. • In the Save As box, under Favorites, choose the Downloads folder, and click Save. • Once your data has been exported, you'll get a notification and you'll choose Finish. For information on how to access the data that you've saved in an Outlook for Mac Data File (.olm), see. I want to export to iCloud or to some other type of archive file The only export option available at this time is the.olm archive file. To request additional export options, visit the to leave your feedback. The Outlook team is actively monitoring this forum. Note: In Outlook for Windows, older Outlook items are archived automatically on a regular interval, also known as AutoArchive. This is not available in Outlook 2011 for Mac, but you can archive data automatically by setting up. Do any of the following: Export to an Outlook for Mac Data File When you export to an Outlook for Mac Data File, you can choose to filter information by category or by item type. For example, if you want to transfer networking information from your work computer to your home computer, you could export only items that you've assigned to the Networking category. Similarly, you might want to export all your contacts on your home computer and then import them on your work computer. During the export process, you can choose to keep the exported items in Outlook, or to delete them after they are exported. • On the File menu, click Export. • Click Outlook for Mac Data File. • Select an option to filter by category or item type. To export all items in Outlook, click Items of the following types, and then select all the check boxes. • Click the right arrow to continue, and then follow the instructions. The Outlook for Mac Data File uses the.olm extension. Notes: • If you have a Microsoft Exchange account or directory services account, contacts from the directory are not exported.
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