A few seconds after I push the power button, the logon screen appears. Without even logging on, under my name it reads “You have 55 unread e-mail messages” or somesuch.
This is prior to my logging on, so how can the OS get access to my e-mail app to find out how many unread I have?
Secondly, I don’t have 55 unread e-mail messages. I have no unread e-mail messages. So the message is just plain wrong.
I get that from using Mozilla Thunderbird. I’m assuming it sets some sort of system registry value or something, and the logon screen checks it. What email app do you use? Try going to your inbox (or maybe other folders) and selecting all the messages and find the “mark as read” option.
Ok, I found it. Like I thought, it was a registry key. Some application on your system must have set it (apparently in error, as you say). You can clear it out manually if you like.
Start->Run
Enter “regedit”
Browse to:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\UnreadMail
Change the MessageCount value to 0
Exit
Interestingly enough, on my system there’s also an Application value, which has the path to Mozilla Thunderbird. If you have one, you can tell which application did it.
Conversely, if you have a .Net Passport account (usually hotmail or msn.com email) associated with your Windows User Account (Start - Settings - Control Panel - User Accounts - .NET Passport), it will tell you how many Hotmail/MSN.com emails you have.
I do believe this only applies when you have Windows Messenger set to run on startup, but I could be wrong.
I dug through the registry and it turned out to be a hotmail account that I haven’t used in months - before I even bought this laptop over the summer. I guess I signed into hotmail once using this laptop and the OS just took it upon itself to make the association between me and that email account. :dubious: