While jailbreaking has been a little bit slow lately in terms of new developments, the Misaka package manager app that hosts add-ons for various iOS & iPadOS 15, 16, and 17 device has been flourishing.
While jailbreaking has been a little bit slow lately in terms of new developments, the Misaka package manager app that hosts add-ons for various iOS & iPadOS 15, 16, and 17 device has been flourishing.
The iDownloadBlog team works tirelessly around the clock to make sure its readers have access to the latest iPhone hacking and jailbreaking news as it happens.
The Misaka package manager app picked up another useful update on Saturday, this time bringing the utility up to version 3.2.0.
If you’re a user of the Dopamine or palera1n rootless jailbreaks for iOS or iPadOS 15.0-15.4.1, then you might want to pay attention to this.
Apple has stopped signing iOS & iPadOS 17.1, the first major software update for iOS & iPadOS 17 since it first debuted this Fall. This means that downgrades to iOS or iPadOS 17.1 are no longer possible on modern handsets.
The Misaka package manager app received another important update on Wednesday, this time bringing it up to version 3.1.6.
The Misaka package manager app has received yet another update, this time to version 3.1.5, bringing another list of bug fixes and user experience improvements to the table.
The Misaka package manager, renowned for letting users install hacks and add-ons on their non-jailbroken devices running iOS & iPadOS 15, 16, and 17, received a slew of important updates over the weekend that are worth discussing.
Apple over the weekend stopped signing iOS & iPadOS 17.0.2, an older firmware that interestingly remained signed even after the Cupertino-based company stopped signing the newer iOS & iPadOS 17.0.3.
The Misaka package manager, now famous for its hosting of add-ons pertaining to the MacDirtyCow & kfd exploits, has received another couple of updates on Friday that may interest users.
iOS 17.2 adds the ability to capture spatial video with the iPhone 15 Pro models to view later in stereoscopic 3D on Apple's $3500 Vision Pro headset.