The RootHide development team’s Procursus-based bootstrap platform for devices that are vulnerable to the CoreTrust bug exploited by TrollStore was officially moved from beta to public release status on Wednesday.
The RootHide development team’s Procursus-based bootstrap platform for devices that are vulnerable to the CoreTrust bug exploited by TrollStore was officially moved from beta to public release status on Wednesday.
The release date for iOS 17.3, iPadOS 17.3 and watchOS 10.3 was confirmed in today's announcement of the new Black Unity Apple Watch band.
In October of last year, we shared news about Cowabunga Lite for macOS being updated to version 2.0 with a slew of new features and improvements. The project hasn’t received any updates since that announcement; until today, that is.
The RootHide development team announced an updated version of the Procursus-based bootstrap on Sunday that introduces a slew of bug fixes and optimizations that will benefit end users and their experience.
One of the things I’ve always sort of disliked about the iOS & iPadOS notification experience is that once you open a notification, it disappears for good. It runs contrary to how it feels to archive an email you’ve already read and then still be able to search for that email thread again in the future. In some ways, I wish I could do the same with my smartphone notifications.
When you use too bright of a wallpaper, iOS & iPadOS sometimes try to make labels and text that sit against it easier to read by introducing a shadow effect underneath that text.
You may remember back in November when we shared the news about a novel Status Bar widget system called Helium by iOS developer LeminLimez, which effectively gave users more control over the look and feel of their iPhone’s Status Bar whether they were jailbroken or not.
The TrollStore perma-signing utility app, after already receiving two updates this week, was updated for a third time Friday afternoon, this time bringing it up to version 2.0.11.
It was only earlier in the day that we reported on the Misaka v8.2.0 update that added official support for arm64 devices in addition to every unsupported firmware combination for arm64e devices. But it seems that project lead developer @straight_tamago wasn’t finished yet.
TrollStore received its first update yesterday in several weeks, adding the ability to enable Developer Mode right from the app on iOS 16 and later. But on Friday, project lead developer Lars Fröder (@opa334dev) released another update, this time to version 2.0.10.
Almost one year ago, we showed you an app for jailbroken devices called KrashKop by iOS developer FoxFortMobile, which offered a modern crash reporting experience for end users wishing to share their crash logs and other useful information with developers for debugging purposes.
The Misaka package manager app was updated to version 8.2.0 late last night with a substantial change: support for all arm64 and arm64e devices via kernel patch finder (kpf).