![]() ![]() It's written by Ariel Gordon, the PM in my team who's driving the work to converge sign-in/sign-up experiences between our two identity systems.Īs always, we would love to receive any feedback or suggestions you have! This post shares the details of the next set of work we've done to address this confusion. Releasing our new combined Microsoft Authenticator apps for iOS and Android back in August was the first major deliverable from those efforts. Luckily we've combined those teams and together we are hard at work address these issues. Users and employees want to know why they have two accounts with the same email address?Īll of these issues are the result of Microsoft having two giant cloud scale identity systems built by different parts of the company. IT Pro want to know if it's ok to ask employees to create Microsoft accounts using their work email addresses or to bulk provision accounts for them. Some of the recurring feedback we're hearing:ĭevelopers want to know how to build apps that support both account types. In particular, we know many of you have pretty strong feelings about this one particular screen: We receive pretty regular feedback about how the split between our cloud identity systems - work/school accounts in Azure Active Directory and personally owned Microsoft accounts (formerly known as "Live ID" accounts) - can make for some pretty confusing user experiences. This guide will teach you how to switch from a Microsoft account to a traditional local account.First published on CloudBlogs on Sep, 15 2016 ![]() ![]() If you want to switch from a Microsoft account to a traditional local account, Windows 11 makes it an easy task from the Settings app. ![]() However, this is not an account type everyone wants since many users don’t like the idea of large companies handling their information or using cloud services. On Windows 11, you probably use a Microsoft account, but you can always switch to a local account, and in this guide, you will learn how.Ī Microsoft account is the default type when setting up a new user on your computer because it provides better security, integration with Microsoft services, and easy files and settings synchronization across devices. To switch from Microsoft to local account on Windows 11, open Settings > Accounts > Your Info, click “Sign in a local account instead,” confirm the local credentials, sign out, and sign back in. ![]()
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