For all the folks who enjoy customizing every facet of their iPhone or iPad, a new add-on is now available for devices susceptible to the MacDirtyCow exploit on iOS 15.0-16.1.2 and the kfd exploit on iOS 16.0-16.6 beta 1.
For all the folks who enjoy customizing every facet of their iPhone or iPad, a new add-on is now available for devices susceptible to the MacDirtyCow exploit on iOS 15.0-16.1.2 and the kfd exploit on iOS 16.0-16.6 beta 1.
If you’re still clinging onto an older iPhone and you’re starting to feel nervous that your handset doesn’t look as good as all those shiny new iPhone 14 devices in circulation these days, then a new add-on called Canvas by iOS developer ChromiumCandy may be able to help.
Having to authenticate yourself with a passcode or even Face ID or Touch ID just to use your device after a respring is an inconvenience that only jailbreakers typically ever have to experience. But with the MacDirtyCow and kfd exploits bringing add-ons to non-jailbroken firmware, even non-jailbreakers are putting up with the added inconvenience these days.
Unless you live in the European Union, you might not be aware that iPhones and many other devices sold there have a volume cap that prevents the max volume from reaching what it can in other parts of the world.
A few years back, we wrote about a jailbreak tweak called Jumper by iOS developer neoish that not only added configurable app shortcuts to the Lock Screen for ease of access but designed them in such a way that they didn’t add unwanted clutter to the interface because they collapse into a smaller space when not in use.
If you haven’t already heard, there’s another package manager app for the MacDirtyCow and kfd exploits in town, and it’s called PureKFD. This project allows you to browse a whole host of repositories that support Misaka and Picasso-compatible packages.
The Control Center user interface is at least mildly customizable on stock devices, at least to the extent that you can rearrange toggles, enable those you use, and disable those you don’t. But the stock experience is lacking something.
PureKFD, the relatively new all-in-one package manager app for the MacDirtyCow and kfd exploits that touts full compatibility with both Misaka and Picasso repositories, was updated Tuesday evening to version 3.4 with more improvements.
The Lock Screen on Face ID-equipped iPhones displays an animated padlock glyph to indicate when your device is locked or unlocked, but many people have become burnt out from seeing the same glyph over the years, prompting the desire for themes that can make it look different.
One of the things you can do with the latest Lock Screen customization features in iOS is change the clock display’s font, but you’re limited in terms of the number of fonts you can pick from out do the box.
Another day, another awesome add-on for devices susceptible to the MacDirtyCow and kfd exploits for iOS & iPadOS 15.0-16.1.2 and 16.0-16.6 beta 1 respectively.