I'll be honest, I thought JailBreaking and Rooting were kinda dead. I used to root my Android back in the day, mainly to bypass tethering restrictions and get adblockers. A lot of stuff you don't need root anymore. As for iOS, I thought they made it so that if you JailBreak, you effetely ruin features like Apple Pay and stuff. Forgive me, I haven't had an iDevice since 2011 lol
Please do always be honest. I really need these different perspectives, much appreciated. If you look at Google Trends for the term 'jailbreaking' it's no longer a popular search term. I believe the mainstream phase of jailbreaking is over. You can even load third party apps without a jailbreak using signing services such as Altstore. But if you look at the jailbreak subreddit or the XDA forums the communities are bigger than ever. Many people seem to love the challenge. It's about the unlimited potential and most jailbreakers like myself have a few special things we really really want to do. Such as one of my favourite iPad games which I wanted to play for pure relaxation but one aspect prevented me. So I patched the game while it was running in RAM and saved my current playthough with the patches. In a sense that was a cheat. But it's a single player game that I now enjoy exactly the way I prefer. Perhaps jailbreaking itself is like playing a game. With it's ongoing challenges and rewards. Apple Pay doesn't currently work on jailbroken iOS 14.5 and higher. But I'm still on iOS 14.3 with my newest iOS device. Jailbreaking is certainly not for everyone as it may have once been in the past. It will always be changing and complicated, but that's the challenge of it all. Thank you for offering your perspectives and thank you for watching!
@@JanusCycle its nearly imposible to jailbreak modern devices on modern firmware. Even on devices with a bootrom exploit apple has sealed the rootfs making it nigh impossible to get a jailbreak on modern firmwares. And with downgrading at the bottom of the sea for a decade jailbreaking just isnt what it used to be.
@@JanusCycle Heck, I don't doubt that Woz is more in favour of an open iOS knowing how he designed those early Apple devices back in the late 70s to early 80s.
Switch to Android and you'll have everything jailbreaking gives you AND MORE right out of the box. Even a jailbroken Apple device doesn't give you nearly as much control over it as a stock Android.
@@eric_d I wouldn't say that's nessecarily true, nor that it is the main reason why Android is better. But on Android it is indeed much easier to do what you want to do. My only real complaint about iOS is that stuff has to be signed by a server. If Apple didn't enforce server signing on everything I would love iOS a lot more. I don't understand how developers work for iOS when they can't access the underlying system as easily. Google even has root functionality in ADB if you have development mode enabled in your Android build. Android phones feel like a real portable computer, iOS phones feel like kiosk devices.
@@eric_das a veteran (kind of) on the android rooting, i'll say meh. Its mostly the same as iOS with more Freedom, but in both cases, you'll need to jailbreak / root if you want the whole control of your phone, while iOS have Cydia and other package installers like zebra, android has xposed and other tweak installers.
Oh man... I forgot about all of this. I had a first gen iPod touch, and I jailbroke it, then packaged up the missing apple apps, as well as made some icon sets to replace existing icons to make it look like an Amiga... and set up my own repository for them all to easily be downloaded from. :D
It's cool to look back at just how limited the "revolution" of phone devices was. They have just slowly grown since, not in small part to early jailbreakers showing demand for more freedom.
I have a 4th gen iPod touch that I jailbroke almost a decade ago but I think it updated to iOS 5 or 6, and basically undid all my jailbreaks. I think this video has given me impetus to look at that thing again. If for nothing else than to find a way to load music onto it without needing itunes...
I remember jailbreaking my iPod Touch Gen 2 back in the day... there were so many fun and weird things in cydia. One of the most useful ones was a RUclips video downloader app. There wasn't public WiFi at my school, so my friends and I would download 144p RUclips videos at home onto our iPod touches and share them with each other later at lunch, sharing a pair of earbuds.
i remember jailbreaking during iOS 5/6 and installing a modified firmware onto an iPhone 3G. If dont remember having things like Filebrowser on my old iPod Touch 4G prior to jailbreaking.
As much as I'd love to Jailbreak my iPhone 14 Pro (which I think isn't even possible yet) the downsides are that you can't use certain apps anymore, or if they detect you're Jailbroken can even ban your accounts. And trying to work against those detections is more work than it's worth.
Unfortunately on Android devices, the situation isn't any better with Google making Play Integrity (the successor of SafetyNet) better at detecting root/unlocked bootloader on devices and patching any bypasses almost daily starting from November this year. This means any apps that include the Play Integrity API (which more and more are starting to do as SafetyNet is being deprecated) may refuse to work on devices with root or even just an unlocked bootloader, even if you're using the PlayIntegrityFix module and various other workarounds (the only viable option at this point is to spoof a device fingerprint which hasn't been blacklisted by Google)
@@JanusCycleCan agree with that one as well, especially for some apps/games like maybe Gunship Sequel: Wings of Duty that I can have on my tablet however that can sense a bit or even a dangerous and concerning bunch (for me) that I'm using Luckypatcher to mod em and thus having the game(s) unable to work in a good way anymore maybe because they can be online games and other reasons/stuff like that fr fnor that I've modded including Gunship Sequel itself bleh/bruh.
Galaxy S7 on second display and second battery with broken SIM tray and screen glass. Still going strong thanks to a chad that still maintains custom ROMs for it in 2023.
I had an ipad 4 running ios 7 or something and i jailbreaked it and installed a multitask tweak i miss those days man jailbreaking was actually weirdly entertaining and feels good
I always wanted to learn programming and made my own tweaks when i was like 10 y/o but i've never had enough patience to learn programming i miss those days
Oh man, i’getting a wild trip to memory lane. I have a second gen iPod touch, just had to jailbreak it right after it went out of warranty. Good times.
Very good explanation of jailbreaking !! got a stash of iPods also touches going to try on my ipod 2g to get more out of it you can’t do anything no internet no camera just music in touch device thats it
Actually it's a very poor explanation from what I've heard so far. I'm only 2 minutes into the video, but anyone who thinks jailbreaking an Apple device is the same thing as rooting an Android device obviously doesn't know much about either. I see the video is from more than a year ago, so hopefully he's learned more about what jailbreaking and rooting actually are, and maybe will delete this video and remake it with correct information.
@@JanusCycle Jailbreaking an Apple device is not the same as rooting. If it was, they would call it rooting, not jailbreaking. A jailbroken Apple device only gives you back SOME of the functionality removed by the evil corporation, but doesn't let you do nearly as much as you can on even a NON-rooted Android device, let alone a rooted one.
@@eric_d An Apple device with root access has just as much potential as any rooted Android device. Your comments indicate an overwhelming hatred for Apple. Rather than deleting this video as you ignominiously suggested, I will be making more videos about Apple, Jailbreaking and Rooting. Maybe about locked bootloaders, preventing Android devices from being unlocked from Factory Reset Protection, that also cannot be bypassed with rooting. Future comments from you will only be permitted if you contain your wilder emotional behaviour and present rational arguments.
@@JanusCycle Sorry if you got mad that I was right. I do, in fact, have a well warranted deep hatred of Apple, but that has nothing to do with my comments. I was just speaking the truth, and you threaten to block me from commenting? That alone proves you know deep down that I'm right, and you don't want me to supply more proof to your viewers. You're afraid it will make you look bad. It's ok, we all make mistakes. You don't have to block anyone, I'll just sit back and let you be wrong without trying to help you anymore.
I jailbroke my 3GS after it stopped receiving updates (I didn't want to have to be constantly vigilant to refuse updates until it was safe), then after I switched to Android I'd immediately rooted and installed CyanogenMod. That was all over a decade ago now though. For a long time I used custom ROMs to keep an older Android phone secure and going, but eventually even they dried-up. Once Google made drive encryption standard, and unlocking the bootloader required disabling encryption, I just gave up on having root and custom ROMs anymore. Which is a shame, because I got really annoyed at the time by having one notification light colour where I'd previously had different colours for each app. Of course, then they got rid of notification lights altogether 🙄 I miss hardware keyboards too. Clearly I'm starting to get old...
The first iPhone, which my partner had, as I use Android/WinMob/Palm, which ever was current at the time, an iPhone 3 (?), had to be Jailbroken, although we did not know this at the time, as the phone was only available to Telstra, so had to be "unlocked" to allow it to be operated on alternate carriers, like Optus, Three, or Vodafone. Even to this day, I won't touch an Apple product as I hate the "walled garden", and Apple has always lagged behind in features that I considered essential like widgets, a feature I had been using since my PalmOS days. Even though Apple have finally offered support for widgets, they are no where near as useful as the offerings on Android, at least from what I have seen.
The iPhone 3G and 3GS could indeed be unlocked for other networks by first jailbreaking, then uploading a hacked baseband. There were serious side effects, such as being unable to upgrade iOS without needing to redo the whole jailbreak and hack. The iPhone 4 put a stop to that sort of unlocking.
Help me! I just jailbroke my iPhone 2G on iOS 1.1.4 using this method, but now I can’t sync music, photos, or videos to my device with iTunes. Please tell me how to fix this! 😭
Have a look through the posts on www.reddit.com/r/LegacyJailbreak and then make a post about your problem in that sub. Be sure to include your iTunes version and OS. Describe the details of the error or what you are experiencing when you try. I'm not sure how to fix this, but if you let me know that you have posted, I'll see what others say and also help if I can.
I don't root my Android phones anymore. I don't need root access at the moment. But I also have an iPod Touch 1st gen, and I want to go back to iOS 1. Is it possible to downgrade without hacking and issues?
You can downgrade to stock iOS 1.1 with no jailbreak, but you do need pwnage tool to boot the iPod for flashing and use a compatible old version of iTunes to do it.
@@JanusCycle On my iPad with iOS 11, I had a very simple Lightning-to-USB-OTG adapter to connect my MIDI keyboard, which worked great, after all, it's just 4 pins. After I upgraded to iOS 12 or 13, that adapter ceased to work. Instead I had to buy a $50 Apple USB-OTG adapter to get it working again. The USB stack on iOS devices is definitely a weird one, not just a functional USB stack, but one that does include at least some DRM.
I would love to root my android phone, mainly for the improved backup capabilities. But sadly that doesn't work for me. I tried lots of different methods of hiding Magisk but all of them failed to hide the root from my banking apps which I actually can't live without sadly.
Most likely PwnageTool, not sure if it installs Cydia or Installer though, at some point Cydia took over. Be sure to check the LegacyJailbreak subreddit, very useful place for this.
My iPad second gen got bricked after installing a phoenix jailbreak update. The only way to fix it is to reflash the firmware but I don't want to lose my data. I honestly don't understand how a config of the user data partition can keep a device from booting. I updated iOS to 9 which should replace the OS if that was the faulty part but nothing works. Maybe the hardware broke somewhere but I would have no clue how or why since it was otherwise completely functional. It just rebooted and never came back to life. I can't get my data off of it. On Android you can get the data partitions from the recovery menu, which iOS doesn't have. Very upsetting and nobody can help me.
You could try using the checkm8 exploit to upload a ramdisk and get SSH access. Then mount the file system and copy your files out. BUT, I don't know any more than this, and I'm sure it's much more complicated than my simple explanation. github.com/dualra1n/ramdisk This checkm8 ramdisk method is used by many forensic tools such as Cellebrite and GrayKey to access data in iOS devices.
@@JanusCycle Yeah, I hate Apple for actively fighting jailbreaking. Google just lets you choose if you want to take control over the full Android operating system. That's one thing that's better about Android. The problem is that my iPhone is basically useless unless if I find a way to either jailbreak it, or get the screen time passcode. Apple support is useless.
I just went and looked into the hows and whys, thinking perhaps it was an abbreviation collision, but it turns-out that Cydia is a graphical front-end for apt! As in, apt-get apt! Even though indeed the OS is based on a long-ago fork of BSD when it still had AT&T code. Presumably iOS could also use .app like NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP did, but the Cydia dev decided to just copy-over the already open-source apt to get Cydia working. I always thought Cydia felt a lot like a package manager, what with updating repos and adding otherwise unsupported repos and the way it handled updates. So I guess that's why! I've always preferred ports on BSD and macports on Mac, so I don't have as much familiarity with apt, but it makes sense that the bones would still show through.
@@amazingborys1125 then you can’t use the jailbreak tools because apple removed 32 bit application support in later macOS versions, but you can still try to install earlier versions on a second partition
2:05 You are very incorrect. Jailbreaking an Apple device is in no way similar to rooting an Android device. Jailbreaking brings back SOME of the functionality that ALL Android devices give you WITHOUT rooting them. Rooting an Android devices gives you 100% total complete control over every aspect of the device, which will NEVER be possible on an Apple product.
Wow! lots of capitalized absolutes in your comment. If I may include some nuance and say that I love jailbraking and having root access on an Apple device, more than having stock Android. But also each device feels unique regardless of brand, because beauty is in the eye of the beholder :)
@@JanusCycle If it were possible to get "root" access on an Apple device, icloud lock wouldn't be possible. How many millions of Apple devices are sitting around locked and will NEVER be able to be used again because getting root access on them is not possible? I personally have about a dozen iphones that I've found over the years and couldn't contact their owners. If it was possible to root an Apple device, I could do that, remove the icloud lock, and be able to resell or use the phones I found. Since rooting and jailbreaking are NOT the same thing, I'll never be able to remove those locks, and can't use the phones for more than movie props or spare parts.
@@eric_d Some Google account locks can be bypassed and Some iCloud locks can be bypassed. The intention of these companies with this practise and the outcomes of their actions are very similar, if not the exact same.
I'll be honest, I thought JailBreaking and Rooting were kinda dead. I used to root my Android back in the day, mainly to bypass tethering restrictions and get adblockers. A lot of stuff you don't need root anymore. As for iOS, I thought they made it so that if you JailBreak, you effetely ruin features like Apple Pay and stuff. Forgive me, I haven't had an iDevice since 2011 lol
Please do always be honest. I really need these different perspectives, much appreciated. If you look at Google Trends for the term 'jailbreaking' it's no longer a popular search term. I believe the mainstream phase of jailbreaking is over. You can even load third party apps without a jailbreak using signing services such as Altstore.
But if you look at the jailbreak subreddit or the XDA forums the communities are bigger than ever. Many people seem to love the challenge. It's about the unlimited potential and most jailbreakers like myself have a few special things we really really want to do. Such as one of my favourite iPad games which I wanted to play for pure relaxation but one aspect prevented me. So I patched the game while it was running in RAM and saved my current playthough with the patches. In a sense that was a cheat. But it's a single player game that I now enjoy exactly the way I prefer. Perhaps jailbreaking itself is like playing a game. With it's ongoing challenges and rewards.
Apple Pay doesn't currently work on jailbroken iOS 14.5 and higher. But I'm still on iOS 14.3 with my newest iOS device. Jailbreaking is certainly not for everyone as it may have once been in the past. It will always be changing and complicated, but that's the challenge of it all. Thank you for offering your perspectives and thank you for watching!
So much cool features you can find in rooting a phone, but i think that custom roms are more popular than rooting nowadays
@@JanusCycle if you are jailbroken with unc0ver, Apple Pay would still work, even on iOS 14.5 and newer
@@JanusCycle its nearly imposible to jailbreak modern devices on modern firmware. Even on devices with a bootrom exploit apple has sealed the rootfs making it nigh impossible to get a jailbreak on modern firmwares. And with downgrading at the bottom of the sea for a decade jailbreaking just isnt what it used to be.
I’m commenting from a jailbroken iOS device right now :)
Why do we jailbreak? Because we deserve finer grain control over our devices.
Yep, every single facet.
@@JanusCycle Heck, I don't doubt that Woz is more in favour of an open iOS knowing how he designed those early Apple devices back in the late 70s to early 80s.
Switch to Android and you'll have everything jailbreaking gives you AND MORE right out of the box. Even a jailbroken Apple device doesn't give you nearly as much control over it as a stock Android.
@@eric_d I wouldn't say that's nessecarily true, nor that it is the main reason why Android is better. But on Android it is indeed much easier to do what you want to do. My only real complaint about iOS is that stuff has to be signed by a server. If Apple didn't enforce server signing on everything I would love iOS a lot more. I don't understand how developers work for iOS when they can't access the underlying system as easily. Google even has root functionality in ADB if you have development mode enabled in your Android build. Android phones feel like a real portable computer, iOS phones feel like kiosk devices.
@@eric_das a veteran (kind of) on the android rooting, i'll say meh.
Its mostly the same as iOS with more Freedom, but in both cases, you'll need to jailbreak / root if you want the whole control of your phone, while iOS have Cydia and other package installers like zebra, android has xposed and other tweak installers.
You've obviously spent a lot of time on the script for your videos. The concise clarity of your descriptions is very soothing to the Asbergers mind 👍
Thank you. I appreciate your comments. It's hard work doing this. Getting these comments really helps motivate me.
Oh man... I forgot about all of this. I had a first gen iPod touch, and I jailbroke it, then packaged up the missing apple apps, as well as made some icon sets to replace existing icons to make it look like an Amiga... and set up my own repository for them all to easily be downloaded from. :D
It's cool to look back at just how limited the "revolution" of phone devices was. They have just slowly grown since, not in small part to early jailbreakers showing demand for more freedom.
I have a 4th gen iPod touch that I jailbroke almost a decade ago but I think it updated to iOS 5 or 6, and basically undid all my jailbreaks. I think this video has given me impetus to look at that thing again. If for nothing else than to find a way to load music onto it without needing itunes...
I remember jailbreaking my iPod Touch Gen 2 back in the day... there were so many fun and weird things in cydia. One of the most useful ones was a RUclips video downloader app. There wasn't public WiFi at my school, so my friends and I would download 144p RUclips videos at home onto our iPod touches and share them with each other later at lunch, sharing a pair of earbuds.
The irony of jailbreaking an ipod using a stylus controlled pocket computer with a physical keyboard on the “bottom 40”
i remember jailbreaking during iOS 5/6 and installing a modified firmware onto an iPhone 3G.
If dont remember having things like Filebrowser on my old iPod Touch 4G prior to jailbreaking.
As much as I'd love to Jailbreak my iPhone 14 Pro (which I think isn't even possible yet) the downsides are that you can't use certain apps anymore, or if they detect you're Jailbroken can even ban your accounts. And trying to work against those detections is more work than it's worth.
I agree, the trade off have certainly changed the decision process these days.
Unfortunately on Android devices, the situation isn't any better with Google making Play Integrity (the successor of SafetyNet) better at detecting root/unlocked bootloader on devices and patching any bypasses almost daily starting from November this year. This means any apps that include the Play Integrity API (which more and more are starting to do as SafetyNet is being deprecated) may refuse to work on devices with root or even just an unlocked bootloader, even if you're using the PlayIntegrityFix module and various other workarounds (the only viable option at this point is to spoof a device fingerprint which hasn't been blacklisted by Google)
@@JanusCycleCan agree with that one as well, especially for some apps/games like maybe Gunship Sequel: Wings of Duty that I can have on my tablet however that can sense a bit or even a dangerous and concerning bunch (for me) that I'm using Luckypatcher to mod em and thus having the game(s) unable to work in a good way anymore maybe because they can be online games and other reasons/stuff like that fr fnor that I've modded including Gunship Sequel itself bleh/bruh.
iPod Touch + StyleTap was great
Galaxy S7 on second display and second battery with broken SIM tray and screen glass. Still going strong thanks to a chad that still maintains custom ROMs for it in 2023.
I had an ipad 4 running ios 7 or something and i jailbreaked it and installed a multitask tweak i miss those days man jailbreaking was actually weirdly entertaining and feels good
I always wanted to learn programming and made my own tweaks when i was like 10 y/o but i've never had enough patience to learn programming i miss those days
Oh man, i’getting a wild trip to memory lane. I have a second gen iPod touch, just had to jailbreak it right after it went out of warranty. Good times.
Very good explanation of jailbreaking !! got a stash of iPods also touches going to try on my ipod 2g to get more out of it you can’t do anything no internet no camera just music in touch device thats it
Actually it's a very poor explanation from what I've heard so far. I'm only 2 minutes into the video, but anyone who thinks jailbreaking an Apple device is the same thing as rooting an Android device obviously doesn't know much about either. I see the video is from more than a year ago, so hopefully he's learned more about what jailbreaking and rooting actually are, and maybe will delete this video and remake it with correct information.
Jailbreaking gives you root access on Apple devices. On Android this is called rooting. What do yo know?
@@JanusCycle Jailbreaking an Apple device is not the same as rooting. If it was, they would call it rooting, not jailbreaking. A jailbroken Apple device only gives you back SOME of the functionality removed by the evil corporation, but doesn't let you do nearly as much as you can on even a NON-rooted Android device, let alone a rooted one.
@@eric_d An Apple device with root access has just as much potential as any rooted Android device. Your comments indicate an overwhelming hatred for Apple.
Rather than deleting this video as you ignominiously suggested, I will be making more videos about Apple, Jailbreaking and Rooting.
Maybe about locked bootloaders, preventing Android devices from being unlocked from Factory Reset Protection, that also cannot be bypassed with rooting.
Future comments from you will only be permitted if you contain your wilder emotional behaviour and present rational arguments.
@@JanusCycle Sorry if you got mad that I was right. I do, in fact, have a well warranted deep hatred of Apple, but that has nothing to do with my comments. I was just speaking the truth, and you threaten to block me from commenting? That alone proves you know deep down that I'm right, and you don't want me to supply more proof to your viewers. You're afraid it will make you look bad. It's ok, we all make mistakes. You don't have to block anyone, I'll just sit back and let you be wrong without trying to help you anymore.
I jailbroke my 3GS after it stopped receiving updates (I didn't want to have to be constantly vigilant to refuse updates until it was safe), then after I switched to Android I'd immediately rooted and installed CyanogenMod. That was all over a decade ago now though. For a long time I used custom ROMs to keep an older Android phone secure and going, but eventually even they dried-up.
Once Google made drive encryption standard, and unlocking the bootloader required disabling encryption, I just gave up on having root and custom ROMs anymore. Which is a shame, because I got really annoyed at the time by having one notification light colour where I'd previously had different colours for each app. Of course, then they got rid of notification lights altogether 🙄 I miss hardware keyboards too. Clearly I'm starting to get old...
when you say they dried up you mean no updates from developers?
@@crooton2258 yep, exactly.
The first iPhone, which my partner had, as I use Android/WinMob/Palm, which ever was current at the time, an iPhone 3 (?), had to be Jailbroken, although we did not know this at the time, as the phone was only available to Telstra, so had to be "unlocked" to allow it to be operated on alternate carriers, like Optus, Three, or Vodafone.
Even to this day, I won't touch an Apple product as I hate the "walled garden", and Apple has always lagged behind in features that I considered essential like widgets, a feature I had been using since my PalmOS days.
Even though Apple have finally offered support for widgets, they are no where near as useful as the offerings on Android, at least from what I have seen.
The iPhone 3G and 3GS could indeed be unlocked for other networks by first jailbreaking, then uploading a hacked baseband. There were serious side effects, such as being unable to upgrade iOS without needing to redo the whole jailbreak and hack. The iPhone 4 put a stop to that sort of unlocking.
im gona say. rooting and custom romming is not dead unless you run banking apps or its ur main phonw
Ha ha ha.. 2:07 - just priceless!
🤣
Help me! I just jailbroke my iPhone 2G on iOS 1.1.4 using this method, but now I can’t sync music, photos, or videos to my device with iTunes. Please tell me how to fix this! 😭
Have a look through the posts on www.reddit.com/r/LegacyJailbreak and then make a post about your problem in that sub.
Be sure to include your iTunes version and OS. Describe the details of the error or what you are experiencing when you try. I'm not sure how to fix this, but if you let me know that you have posted, I'll see what others say and also help if I can.
2:08 watch out guys he has a bomb in his hand
explosive
Awesome video
thanks!
2:04; ooo a note 7!
it really sucks how we cant get untethered jailbreaks anymore it should be illegal for apple to lock down devices we own
I don't root my Android phones anymore. I don't need root access at the moment. But I also have an iPod Touch 1st gen, and I want to go back to iOS 1. Is it possible to downgrade without hacking and issues?
You can downgrade to stock iOS 1.1 with no jailbreak, but you do need pwnage tool to boot the iPod for flashing and use a compatible old version of iTunes to do it.
"Apple-compatible USB controller" lolololol - more like "USB-compatible Apple"
Tell me about it. It's so annoying and weird that this was such a big problem.
@@JanusCycle On my iPad with iOS 11, I had a very simple Lightning-to-USB-OTG adapter to connect my MIDI keyboard, which worked great, after all, it's just 4 pins. After I upgraded to iOS 12 or 13, that adapter ceased to work. Instead I had to buy a $50 Apple USB-OTG adapter to get it working again.
The USB stack on iOS devices is definitely a weird one, not just a functional USB stack, but one that does include at least some DRM.
Apple devices are special, but Androids are ordinary with many more features.
I do love my alcatels!
Cool video and why your Sony vaios courser flickering ?
Hey thanks. It just seems to be that software program that causes the flicker and I'm not sure why.
@@JanusCycle oh k thx
I wonder if it's possible to jailbreak a Sony Walkman.
Sony Walkmans have used a couple of different OSs. I would like to try some custom firmware on them one day.
I would love to root my android phone, mainly for the improved backup capabilities.
But sadly that doesn't work for me. I tried lots of different methods of hiding Magisk but all of them failed to hide the root from my banking apps which I actually can't live without sadly.
Do you know how to jailbreak iOS 2?
Most likely PwnageTool, not sure if it installs Cydia or Installer though, at some point Cydia took over. Be sure to check the LegacyJailbreak subreddit, very useful place for this.
I got the iPod Touch 1st Generation with the ios 3, Do you know games or apps that I can download?
more than you can imagine, archive.org/details/ios_3_ipa
@JanusCycle So just adding the link in Cydia and that's all?
nope, use iTunes or the Cydia app IPA Installer or some other sideloading
jile breaks?
what "jile" meam?
Jile breaking?
I waited in line for 16 hours. I was the 5th person to buy it for 1200 dollars. I got a refund for like 400 several months after
Wow, a true early adopter :)
does the itunes app still function on ios 1-3?
Yes, iTunes works fine with iOS 1-3. Except for restoring which may also need a third party tool to help finish a restore on some devices.
@@JanusCycle thanks
My iPad second gen got bricked after installing a phoenix jailbreak update. The only way to fix it is to reflash the firmware but I don't want to lose my data. I honestly don't understand how a config of the user data partition can keep a device from booting. I updated iOS to 9 which should replace the OS if that was the faulty part but nothing works. Maybe the hardware broke somewhere but I would have no clue how or why since it was otherwise completely functional. It just rebooted and never came back to life. I can't get my data off of it. On Android you can get the data partitions from the recovery menu, which iOS doesn't have. Very upsetting and nobody can help me.
You could try using the checkm8 exploit to upload a ramdisk and get SSH access. Then mount the file system and copy your files out. BUT, I don't know any more than this, and I'm sure it's much more complicated than my simple explanation.
github.com/dualra1n/ramdisk
This checkm8 ramdisk method is used by many forensic tools such as Cellebrite and GrayKey to access data in iOS devices.
so iOS has a debian userspace hidden underneath? interesting
No, but Cydia is a GUI for the apt package manager. iOS itself is based on BSD.
2:48 NOTRUF!
I can’t jailbreak my iPhone X because there is no SEP exploit.
Modern jailbreaking has become much more complex with extra roadblocks :(
@@JanusCycle Yeah, I hate Apple for actively fighting jailbreaking. Google just lets you choose if you want to take control over the full Android operating system. That's one thing that's better about Android. The problem is that my iPhone is basically useless unless if I find a way to either jailbreak it, or get the screen time passcode. Apple support is useless.
I will not jailbreak my iPad, I will sideload AltStore to install UTM, so I can use emulate.
5:00 Wait, iOS uses the same app packaging format as Debian?!? I thought it is based on BSD, not Debian?
yes, .deb packages.
I just went and looked into the hows and whys, thinking perhaps it was an abbreviation collision, but it turns-out that Cydia is a graphical front-end for apt! As in, apt-get apt! Even though indeed the OS is based on a long-ago fork of BSD when it still had AT&T code.
Presumably iOS could also use .app like NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP did, but the Cydia dev decided to just copy-over the already open-source apt to get Cydia working.
I always thought Cydia felt a lot like a package manager, what with updating repos and adding otherwise unsupported repos and the way it handled updates. So I guess that's why! I've always preferred ports on BSD and macports on Mac, so I don't have as much familiarity with apt, but it makes sense that the bones would still show through.
Oo Fortnite on an ios device! Does it still work?
Fortnight is not working for me, but I have heard some people have been able to get it working :)
You could tell where to download Pxl files…
I don't remember, but here are the ones I have.
drive.google.com/file/d/1kUykvqYL3wyFFGDPH1yyVaGE_6DeSA4Z/view
If my android was KOS-MOS I would root it.
Das a few apps how dat total to 11 apps 🤔
I have a iMac from 2015. So i cant jailbreak the iPhone 2g
I see no reason why your iMac can't jailbreak an iPhone 2G. The JB tools should run fine.
@@JanusCycle it is running Mac OS Monterey
@@amazingborys1125 then you can’t use the jailbreak tools because apple removed 32 bit application support in later macOS versions, but you can still try to install earlier versions on a second partition
Very banana breab uwu
330
iBrickr is a terrible name LMAO
3310.
2:05 You are very incorrect. Jailbreaking an Apple device is in no way similar to rooting an Android device. Jailbreaking brings back SOME of the functionality that ALL Android devices give you WITHOUT rooting them. Rooting an Android devices gives you 100% total complete control over every aspect of the device, which will NEVER be possible on an Apple product.
Wow! lots of capitalized absolutes in your comment. If I may include some nuance and say that I love jailbraking and having root access on an Apple device, more than having stock Android. But also each device feels unique regardless of brand, because beauty is in the eye of the beholder :)
@@JanusCycle If it were possible to get "root" access on an Apple device, icloud lock wouldn't be possible. How many millions of Apple devices are sitting around locked and will NEVER be able to be used again because getting root access on them is not possible? I personally have about a dozen iphones that I've found over the years and couldn't contact their owners. If it was possible to root an Apple device, I could do that, remove the icloud lock, and be able to resell or use the phones I found. Since rooting and jailbreaking are NOT the same thing, I'll never be able to remove those locks, and can't use the phones for more than movie props or spare parts.
@@eric_d Google implemented Android Factory Reset Protection that locks phones and you can't get around by rooting.
@@JanusCycle Google account locks can be bypassed.
@@eric_d Some Google account locks can be bypassed and Some iCloud locks can be bypassed. The intention of these companies with this practise and the outcomes of their actions are very similar, if not the exact same.
Il
Hint:ii or LL or iL tap on the three choices if you get your answers press read more...
Answer:iL