This information pertains to LabQuest 2 and LabQuest 3.

The original LabQuest does not support this functionality.

In LabQuest version 2.7.0 and higher, LabQuest App includes an e-mail setup wizard-style tool that allows you to setup certain e-mail accounts, (Gmail, Yahoo, and Hotmail and some others,) by entering the username and the password and not having to specify technical details like servers and port numbers. For more detail, see:
     How do I set up LabQuest 2 to email data with a Gmail account?
     How do I set up LabQuest 3 to email data with a Gmail account?

This method also uses a more secure type of encryption. The new security requires the clock on LabQuest to be accurate. Normally the clock on LabQuest is synchronized by several methods* and so it is normally fairly accurate, but in the event that none of those have happened and the clock is off by months or years, the encryption will fail and you will get a message indicating:

“There was an error communicating with your email provider (code 4). Please try again later.”

The solution to this is to set the clock manually:
LabQuest 2—Tap Home > System > Time & Date
LabQuest 3—Choose Time & Date from the Setting screen

Typically you will want to set your timezone:
-Tap to the right of the word “Time Zone:”.
-If you have never set it, it will probably says “posix/UTC” or “Universal”.
-Set the correct date and time.
-Setup e-mail again, and the security should pass.

*Methods LabQuest uses to set the clock:
1) NTP: Network Time Protocol. When LabQuest is connected to a Wi-Fi network, it will attempt to contact a server on the internet and set the clock. Some Wi-Fi networks will block this.
2) GPS: If you turn on the GPS, LabQuest sets the clock based on the GPS signal.
3) Connected to a computer running Logger Pro/Logger Lite. If you connect the LabQuest unit to a computer, LabQuest will set its own clock to match the computer.