![]() You should repeat the process for each of your troublesome accounts. ![]() If it is unchecked, check it and relaunch Mail if it's checked, then uncheck it, quit and relaunch Mail, reenable it and then quit and relaunch Mail once again.Look at the list and at the top of the list you’ll see the ‘Automatically detect and maintain account settings’ tick box.If one of your accounts seems to be misbehaving (it may not be sending email, seem inactive or in other ways seem faulty), launch Mail Preferences and select the account in the Accounts tab, then click on the ‘Advanced’ tab. This fix seemed to help when OS 10.10.4 shipped earlier this year, so it seems worth trying in OS X El Capitan. Set the ‘Outgoing Mail Server’ section to the right to iCloud.Launch Mail and open Preferences>Accounts. ![]() Once this process completes, click on the box to turn Mail back on, and close System Preferences.Open System Preferences>iCloud and unclick the checkbox beside Mail to disable it.If you can’t send email using your iCloud account after upgrading to El Capitan then following these steps may help:
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