Wow technology has come a long way…
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Wow technology has come a long way…
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Apple hasn’t yet put the 1.1.2 update into iTunes but the iPhone and iPod touch are already jailbroken! With pictures.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Jailbreakable or not! No more 3rd party apps! Who knows!
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Run this from terminal and load up time machine to select your drive! You don’t need to hook the drive up to the Mac first, you dont have to go chowning files and all that nonsense.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Evidence is mounting that the frequent video lockups experienced by some owners of Apple’s all-aluminum iMacs may be the result of an ATI video chipset pushed to its breaking point rather than a software bug.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Engadget got a chance to sit down with Apple and Starbucks folks at a participating location in downtown San Francisco, here’s what they learned:
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Moving quickly to address issues in the inaugural version of its Leopard operating system, Apple on Wednesday tapped its developer community to begin testing the first maintenance and bug fix update to the software, labeled Mac OS X 10.5.1. Among the fixes already baked into the first test build are corrections to Leopard’s application Firewall, Sp
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
As expected, Apple has started seeding Mac OS 10.5.1 to developers for testing. The latest seed carries a build number of 9B13 and offers a number of fixes.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Sure, firmware release 1.1.2 is just around the corner — expected to launch along with the European iPhone in just a few days — but that hasn’t stopped the guys at jailbreakme.com from updating their software and enhancing your jailbreaking experience.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple
Apple’s Mac OS 10.5 Leopard ‘loginwindow’ process phones home to lcs.mac.com on port 443 which is only revealed by running the new Little Snitch 2 security monitoring tool.
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Digg / Apple