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 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.
Having coverage of the latest iPhone and iPad hacking and jailbreaking news as it happens is our specialty, but outside of that, we also recognize how most people lead busy lives and can’t keep their eyes glued to their phone or computer all day long waiting for news.
Browsing apps and games on the App Store is easier on iOS 17.2 with a new navigation bar at the top for scrolling through various categories.
While most people want their iPhone to recognize their true location for mapping and navigation, there are niche circumstances under which users can benefit from spoofed locations — that is, faking your location.
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.
Since being updated to version 3.0 this week, the Misaka package manager app for MacDirtyCow & kfd exploit-vulnerable devices has received a lot of smaller bug fix updates.
Apple on Tuesday released iOS & iPadOS 17.1.1 (build 21B91) to the general public, a small yet important software update for iPhones and iPads up from version 17.1 that introduces important bug fixes for those platforms.
The Misaka package manager app received a major update on Monday to version 3.0, bringing with it a slew of improvements that users and developers alike are going to be especially excited about.
The iDB crew covers iPhone & iPad jailbreaking from the moment news strikes to those deep analyses and tutorials that you need in between your fix of jailbreak tweak releases, and we do it week in and week out.
One of the things that I find sort of annoying on the iPhone and iPad is that when I connect a pair of AirPods or another brand of Bluetooth headphones, I can hear every keyboard click.