If you have ever jailbroke an iOS or iPadOS device with palera1n before, then you would know that the tool’s semi-tethered status requires you to connect to a computer every time you want to re-jailbreak your device.
If you have ever jailbroke an iOS or iPadOS device with palera1n before, then you would know that the tool’s semi-tethered status requires you to connect to a computer every time you want to re-jailbreak your device.
The Misaka package manager app for the MacDirtyCow and kfd exploits received a handful of updates within the past 24 hours with a ton of improvements for end users. The latest version at the time of this writing is now v3.3.6.
I still remember more than a decade ago when I first began jailbreaking iPhones that I would always install a particular theme on my device called Glasklart. I always appreciated the transparent icons on my Home Screen, along with the simplistic glyphs at the center of them.
If you’re interested in harnessing the power of the MacDirtyCow exploit for iOS & iPadOS 15.0-16.1.2 or the kfd exploit for iOS & iPadOS 16.0-16.6 beta 1 to add a touch of extra information to your handset’s Status Bar, then we have a feeling that you’ll appreciate a new add-on called Real Weather by iOS developers YangJiii and Robin.
Picasso, the device customization toolbox app for iPhones and iPads susceptible to the kernel file descriptor (kfd) exploit received another update over the weekend, this time bringing to the tool up to version 3.1. It’s the first major update to the Picasso software since it went free following the TrollStore 2 release.
PureKFD, the kfd exploit-based toolbox app and package manager all-in-one by iOS developer @lrdsnow received an important update to version 4.2 this week.
The Misaka package manager app, renowned for giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to install hacks and add-ons without a jailbreak by way of the MacDirtyCow (iOS & iPadOS 15.0-16.1.2) and kfd (iOS & iPadOS 16.0-16.6 beta 1) exploits, has received another important update.
It has always been possible to inject third-party code into decrypted .ipa files so that they could be sideloaded onto your iPhone or iPad with more functionality than the app would have directly from the App Store, but this has always been a somewhat inconvenient method of going about it.
The Misaka package manager app picked up an additional update on Tuesday, this time to version 3.2.9 as a relatively minor bug fix update.
If you haven’t already heard, the XinaA15 v2 jailbreak recently launched with newfangled support for the rootlessdynamic on iOS & iPadOS 15.0-15.4.1, a stark departure from the rootful version supporting only iOS & iPadOS 15.0-15.1.1 before.
The Misaka package manager app, long used for installing MacDirtyCow and kfd exploit-related add-ons, and more recently for JavaScript tweaks and for installing TrollStore 2, received another update on Thursday, this time bringing it up to version 3.2.7.
You’ve heard a lot about Misaka and Picasso both picking up installation methods for TrollStore 2, but did you know that even the PureKFD package manager app has incorporated a way to install TrollStore 2?