This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. I have the same question Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit. Here's how I fixed mine: I just ignored the sign in request and Xed it out and it works perfectly without ever signing in.
How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. Sign-in : Endless sign-in loop a. Wrong Password In my opinion, this loop is due to you signing-in with the wrong password. Chances are, a new security protocol is in force, one that requires you to change your password.
Gmail has done exactly this, and some providers are following Gmail's lead. Go to the e-mail service's website. Investigate what new password procedure they are using. This should be your first step, before trying anything else. You must create a new password actually an additional password , on the website, because thet have recently updated their security procedure.
The following procedure is what someone who has a Gmail account told me. I can't test it, I don't have Gmail. But I have had reports of success in using it. What you are trying to do is sign-in to your account on the website, and there change the password that you use for Windows Live Mail. From now on you must use what they call an "app password" to sign-in in Windows Live Mail.
They think Windows Live Mail is an "app"! Once created, you type the 2nd password into Windows Live Mail instead of your original password. You have to do the following - 1. Login to your e-mail account on their website. Go to your account. Go to Security. Go to "app password" or similar.
Then it will ask your account password. Type in the original password. Specify the application "app" in which you will be managing e-mail, which will be "Windows Live Mail" but they might know it as "Windows Essentials" or "Windows Live Essentials". Specify your Operating System e. Windows 7. IS there any way to find this from command line?
I think from event log we can find the last logged in user name. I do not know of any way to know this from command line. It would print the last login time. This will show the date and time the user account logged on, and will reflect any restart of Windows that bypassed the login process. How can I use this to show more than one value. In example if may wanted to show User name and Password last set. I have a hard time to find a culprit student who love to sabotage my labs keyboard button.
QUser cblackburn was what I needed thank you. Is there a different command that will show me the last time I locked or unlocked the machine which would still be more recent. To get started, open up Command Prompt on your Windows computer. Following that, enter this command-. However, if you want to check the last login details of another user account, you need to enter that username, respectively. Also, you can check the last login time of your administrator account.
If you enabled it earlier, you could find the date and time. To get information about the last activities on your computer, you can use the Event Viewer.
Event Viewer is an in-built tool, and it does what it says. To use this in-built tool, you need to follow these steps. At first, open up the Event Viewer on your computer. There are two ways to open it. Second, you can search for Event Viewer in the Taskbar search box and click the respective result. Now, you can find some keywords called Audit Success.
You need to check them one by one. If you double-click on any of these entries, you can find the user account details or username that performed the task. Although it is enabled in almost all the Windows 10 computers, you need to enable it manually if you turned it off in the past.
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