Difference between revisions of "Up to Speed"

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Think of iPhone as a little computer, even though Apple doesn't want you to. It has a [[S5L8900|processor]], RAM, a "[[NAND|hard drive]]", an operating system, and a [[Baseband Device|cellular modem]] on the serial port.
 
Think of iPhone as a little computer, even though Apple doesn't want you to. It has a [[S5L8900|processor]], RAM, a "[[NAND|hard drive]]", an operating system, and a [[Baseband Device|cellular modem]] on the serial port.
   
If you want to get started, first you should listen to the [[25C3_presentation_Hacking_the_iPhone|25C3 presentation "Hacking the iPhone"]]. This was in 2008, but it explains the basics in detail. You should also learn assembler for [[ARM]] processors.
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If you want to get started, first you should listen to the [[25C3 presentation "Hacking the iPhone"]]. This was in 2008, but it explains the basics in detail. You should also learn assembler for [[ARM]] processors.
   
 
===Now===
 
===Now===

Revision as of 01:26, 27 December 2010

So, all of this sounds intimidating. Jailbreak, sign, secpack, unlock, baseband, iBoot, seczone, JailbreakMe, pwnage.

Don't worry, this should bring you up to speed.

  • Activate - to bypass the required iTunes signup.
  • Jailbreak - to allow full write and execute privileges on the iPhone, iPod touch, iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4 and iPad.
  • Unlock - to allow the use of any mobile phone carrier's SIM.

Think of iPhone as a little computer, even though Apple doesn't want you to. It has a processor, RAM, a "hard drive", an operating system, and a cellular modem on the serial port.

If you want to get started, first you should listen to the 25C3 presentation "Hacking the iPhone". This was in 2008, but it explains the basics in detail. You should also learn assembler for ARM processors.

Now