If you’ve been reading this site for the last few days, you’re probably aware iOS Beta 2 came out a...
According to Chris Whitmore, an analyst at Deutsche Bank, we won’t see a new iPhone this September, but two: a...
This new iOS tweak promises to replace the system’s intrusive default call screen forever with a much nicer one that...
Bad news for the jailbreakers amongst us. Coming out of the Dev-Team tonight, with a post on the groups blog explaining that Apple's iOS 5 betas are providing clues as to how the company intends to combat saving SHSH Blobs moving forward.
According to sources at Apple Stores, employees are now able to unlock standard AT&T iPhone 4's at checkout, in case inventory for unlocked phones run low. Yes, that's right, Apple owns its own internal unlocking solution for the locked iPhones.
It's happened to the best of us. You're sat there, jailbreaking your iPhone, iPad or even iPod touch for all its worth and something goes horribly wrong. Not only did you not successfully jailbreak your iDevice, but you also managed to end up with one that won't start up. It's time to reach for that all-too-difficult recovery mode - along with the hand-achingly irritating button combination needed to invoke it.
New releases of iOS usually mean new releases of iOS jailbreaking software and the same goes for new betas, too. With Apple releasing iOS 5 beta 2 to developers on Friday, we heard that Redsn0w could be used to jailbreak iPhones, iPads and iPod touches for the Mac users amongst us. But what if you're (un)lucky enough to be tied into the Windows world?
We here at Redmond Pie love a good Infographic. While it's true that a good 2,000 word blog post can be an interesting read, there's not doubt that every once in a while we like to just sit back, relax, and admire a few hundred or thousand pixels-worth of graphical information.
WeeFacebook for jailbroken iOS 5 devices has been updated, folks! The widget now takes up less space in the Notification Center and provides a better overall user-experience.
After years of iPhone users whining about the complete lack of any kind of multitasking in iOS, Apple finally gave us all what we wanted when iOS 4 launched mid-way through 2010. But while Apple’s implementation works well, it’s not strictly multitasking – apps are held in a ‘frozen state’ and resumed when needed. A host of APIs and a tinge of jailbreaking fills in the missing gaps.

