
A jailbroken iPhone can do a lot more than what Apple wants it to do.
(Credit: Screenshot by Dong Ngo/CNET)
The cat and mouse game continues between Apple and the Dev Team, a group of
guys who are passionate about freeing Apple handheld devices from the company's
short leash. The Dev Team has been jailbreaking new Apple firmware for years,
and it just did so again--though this time around it seems Apple is still taking
the decisive lead.
The team announced Friday
the
availability of PwnageTool 3.13, which allows for jailbreaking and unlocking
the
iPhone
3GS running the latest firmware, version 3.1. Currently only a Mac version
of the tool is available, but the Windows version will be out soon.
The tool creates a custom firmware from the version 3.1 firmware released by
Apple. To install it, you put the phone into recovery mode (turn it off, then
plug it in while holding down the Home button) and use iTunes to restore the
phone with the custom firmware (hold down the Option key while clicking on the
Restore button).
The custom firmware, apart from jailbreaking, will not upgrade the
baseband--the chip that connects the phone to a service provider--and therefore
still allows the phone to be unlocked.
But there's a catch here. The tool works with only the iPhone 3GS
that has
been jailbroken with the firmware version 3.0 or 3.0.1. This means if you
buy a new iPhone 3GS that already has version 3.1 on it or you have updated to
version 3.1 using iTunes, there's still no way to have your phone jailbroken.
There's even a rumor that there may never be one, unless a new exploit is
found.
If this is true, it seems Apple has finally been able to gain significant
ground in stopping the practice
it claims could pose a
threat to national security. And for thousands, if not millions of iPhone
3GS users who rely on jailbreaking and unlocking to use their phones with the
service of their choice, this is sad news.
Note that this tool applies to only the iPhone 3GS and the
iPod touch 2G and 3G.
The iPhone 3G, 2G, and other generations of the iPod touch can now be jailbroken
regardless of what versions of firmware they run.
Apart from allowing for unlocking, which makes the iPhone work with any cell
service provider, jailbreaking allows the device to support third-party
applications not available at Apple's App Store. Examples of functions offered
by these apps include tethering, video recording for the iPhone 3G and 2G,
running multiple applications in the background, changing the display themes,
and so on. Most are also free.
The firmware version 3.1 for the iPhone 3G and 3GS is a significant update as
it adds multimedia messaging to the phone, tempting a lot of jailbroken iPhone
users to do the upgrade before the Dev Team could find a way to jailbreak the
firmware. On the downside, firmware 3.1 seems to drain the phone's battery life really
fast.
Via
Crave CNET
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