Action Menu Plus Cracked

September 16, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - Cracked .deb's

Action Menu for iPhone is quite a handy tweak. It brings the missing feature of clipboard/ pasteboard along with cut copy paste feature available on firmware 3.0/ iPhone 3GS. The tweak works very smoothly and also has a nice loading speed unlike clippy. It also has an advanced version which is paid which brings features like dial, search history etc to iPhone.
Personally its my favourite tweak by cydia as it brings clipboard tab keeping intact all the other features/ tabs like copy, copy all, cut, correction ( inspell) and paste. It also has page scrolling feature/tab included in the free package available for $2.99

To use the tweak you have to go to settings/action menu where you can edit the settings. You have an option to use icons or names for the tabs under its settings.(I prefer using tabs). To add things to the clipboard you need to add them as favorite and then type anything you want.
The only missing feature is that you can’t directly add things to clipboard but I expect the developer to put this feature in the coming updates to the app. To download Read more…

Is the future of Mac…the iPhone?

September 16, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

I was chatting with my TUAW colleagues this morning about Mac versus iPhone programming. And as per usual with these conversations, we veered in the direction of unfettered speculation. It’s an occupational hazard.

As someone who regularly develops on both platforms, I declared that the iPhone represents the future of Mac programming. The iPhone, I posited, offers a great new platform without the need to be fully backwards compatible like the Mac. Our own Victor Agreda challenged me to back up that position. After a bit of time and thought, I decided to do so in this post.

My key point is this: Apple’s engineers have learned a lot of important design lessons during the history of OS X. When the iPhone debuted, it gave those engineers the chance to rebuild an OS and an API from the ground up. Those engineers could craft a platform and its libraries that built on the Mac’s successes without Read more…

iPhone Dev: Future Proof Your iPhone 3GS Jailbreak

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

Future-proofing the 3GS jailbreak

If there’s one thing we’ve been stressing the last few weeks, it’s that if you want to keep the jailbreak or unlock on your 3GS, you should resist all urges to install Apple’s official firmware updates without knowing if a jailbreak exists for that version yet.  Unless another (different) bootrom exploit is found for the 3GS that doesn’t require a “foot in the door” with a signed official iBoot, then accepting official updates willy-nilly may cause you to be cutoff from the jailbreak.  And it will definitely cause you to be cutoff from the carrier unlock.

Now, there are ways to ensure that even after taking an official 3GS update (which you really shouldn’t do!), that you’ll nonetheless be able to revert to a jailbreakable 3GS (this is NOT true for the unlock, see NOTE #1 below).  We’ve been explaining these methods (like the iTunes /tmp technique) over the last few weeks, and there’s been some great discussion and feedback for the methods in the comments.

Having said all that, we realize that some of you updated your 3GS to 3.1 anyway.  If you want to come back to the world of the jailbreak (but NOT the sim unlock, sorry!) then saurik’s new “on file” server may be able to help.  He’s Read more…

Downgrade Your iPhone 3GS Using Sauriks Server

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News
web server

Thanks to Saurik for all of his hard work. Below is his explanation from saurik.com on how to downgrade your iPhone 3G S and also how to continue using his server for future Apple firmware updates.

Bypassing the Overlord

To this end, I have constructed a server that duplicates the functionality exposed by Apple’s signature server, except using “on file” results rather than live requests.

All we need, then, is to make iTunes use it. Luckily, most operating systems also have the ability to locally define bypasses on specific hostnames through a file called hosts. Using this, we can redirect requests to Apple’s signature server to Cydia.

So, open the file C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts (Windows) or /etc/hosts (Mac OS X) and add the following entry to the bottom of the file.

74.208.105.171 gs.apple.com

Now, when iTunes thinks it is talking to Apple, it is talking to Cydia Read more…

Saurik Explains His Ecid SHSH Storage Used By Cydia

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

IMG_0282 IMG_0283 IMG_0284

Caching Apple’s Signature Server

Please, for the love of all that is holy, do not e-mail me if you have problems. Instead, go to ModMyi.com, where there is a special forum called 3G[S] Downgrading, created for the purposes of this article.

Seriously: there is no way I could possibly hope to answer even the number of e-mails I’m currently receiving regarding this, and the article isn’t even out yet. There is this wonderful scene from Bruce Almighty where Bruce sees his e-mail inbox: that happens to me every day. :(

I have very little respect for Apple at this point: I make no secret of this fact. Apple, as a company, has turned into a corporate hypocracy, embodying the very ideals that it claims to be rebelling against. “Think Different”, as a slogan, has become a cold criticism of their own actions with regards to their product lines.

The Next Hope

Apple is not just a computer company: Apple is a movement. This concept was finally and truly cemented in the public mindset when Apple carved itself a lasting place in the history of marketing with its 1984 superbowl commercial for Macintosh.

Styled after the classic Orwellian distopia, 1984, this commercial was set in a future where all aspects of individuality had been stamped out by the overlords, constantly vigilant, watching from their television monitors.

This world, as well as everyone in it, was rendered in a blue and gray: some believe we are to see the overlords as IBM, well reknowned for their corporate beaurocracy, and soon to be hated for trying to control our very thoughts with their bland machinery.

Others, including the creative director of the commercial, Lee Clow, state that the commercial represents the abstract struggle of “the few against the many”: Apple’s Macintosh standing as a symbol of “empowerment”. [Wikipedia]

The True Enemy

However, as time grew on, Apple’s real stance on individual expression and “empowerment” in particular, became clear: they are staunchly against it. Apple’s insistence on controlling the experience of their products sounds very similar to the “garden of pure ideology” expoused by the Big Brother in their own commercial.

Today we celebrate the first glorious anniversary of the Information Purification Directives. We have created, for the first time in all history, a garden of pure ideology: where each worker may bloom, secure from the pests of any contradictory… thoughts.

Our Unification of Thoughts is more powerful a weapon than any fleet or army on Earth. We are one people: with one will, one resolve, one cause. Our enemies shall talk themselves to death and we will bury them with their own confusion. We shall prevail!

The Point of Jailbreaking

This is why many of us (upwards of 10% of all iPhone users, in fact) “jailbreak” our devices: we want choice. We believe that Apple has maintained its lead as the best mobile hardware platform provider, and Read more…

Apple Stores to Get Dedicated iPhone Areas?

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

Apple may be redesigning its retail stores to include dedicated iPhone areas for activation and support, according to MacRumors.

The activation zones will reportedly be staffed by a new category of retail store employee called “iPhone Experts”, who will be denoted by unique name badges and t-shirts. With the move, Apple is clearly looking to streamline the iPhone purchasing experience for customers and provide a dedicated iPhone point of contact within the crowded retail store setting, particularly for new customers whose first experience with Apple products may be the iPhone.

These changes could occur as early as tomorrow…

Read More

Via iclarified.com

The Reason New iPod Touch Didn’t Get A Camera

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

ipod-touch-leak-reveal-rm-eng

Everyone, including Steve Jobs, has very reasonable sounding theories as to why the third gen iPod touch camera was removed. Rather than rehash it again, however, we thought we’d let our minds wonder into parody, and consider what might have happened in a world only slightly more cartoonish than ours…

Steve Jobs, fresh from his recent leave of absence, comes crashing back into Apple’s Cupertino campus, and after fixing the typography on the iPhone 3G S 3GS, tweaking some pixels on the Snow Leopard UI, and spending time meditating deep in the iTablet vault, he heads over to the scorched closet that used to be reserved for iPhone A2DP testing…

“64GB a go?” he demands. “Good”

“Is it thinner?” grumble. “Next year…”

“What about those ultra-tiny auto-focus 3 megapixel Read more…

iPhone vs Zune HD Battle Brewing

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

Microsoft has confirmed gaming capabilities for the new Zune HD via a promotional video posted online.

The Zune HD features a 3.3-inch OLED touch screen with 480 x 272 resolution and 16:9 display. It is considered Microsoft’s first viable competition to the iPod at $219.99 and $289.99 for the 16GB and 32GB respectively.

Amazon is currently offering the Zune HD for pre-order; however, only the black and platinum editions can be pre-ordered:

Zune HD 16 GB
Zune HD 32 GB (Platinum)

Via iClarified.com

Microsoft Starts Advertising In iPhone Apps

September 15, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News

A Twitter user by the name of Raphael Moser noticed over the weekend that Marketplace for Windows Mobile advertisements were starting to appear in his iPhone apps. The ad has the Windows Marketplace for Mobile logo, the name of the store in all caps, and two more words in all caps: “Submit App.” The software giant probably could have put together a slightly more convincing ad, although there really wasn’t that much space to work with.

It’s unclear how widespread this advertisement, or any accompanying ones, are (nobody at the Ars HQ has seen any), but Microsoft definitely has the money to push them out en masse. Even with the proper cash though, it’s not necessarily easy to pull off. There are only ads in some iPhone applications and there isn’t any easy way Microsoft can target all apps with the same ad. Apps on the iPhone run ads from various ad networks, and Microsoft likely advertises through some of those ad networks (our guess is The Deck).

Click the image to open in full size.

Whether Microsoft targeted iPhone apps specifically is unclear, but it’s completely possible, given the ad’s dimensions and the fact that Microsoft is interested in targeting iPhone developers. Doing so is a smart move for the company; it’s definitely better for Microsoft to embrace the iPhone developer Read more…

A bug in security allows you to read passwords on Firmware 3.0

September 14, 2009 :: Posted by - SoSly :: Category - News