Internet Ownage…

June 26th, 2010 § Leave a Comment

It never get’s old. I’m not going to lie, I appreciate getting into arguments with people over the internet (or over any other medium really), and I get kicks out of winning. How doesn’t. The latest to respond to my provocation was photographer, middle-aged man and twitter big-shot Scott Bourne. (Yes Scott, I’m still giving you link love, I hope we can still be friends!)

Mr. Bourne is an apparently very successful self-employed photographer who runs Photofocus.com who recently bought a Dodge Challenger SRT8, and has been keeping his readers aware of the mods he has been outfitting his new vehicle with via Twitter. From the very start, I’m not an American car kind of guy, but I made no comment. His latest tweet about his new mirror decals however needed to be called out.

The outcome: I am blocked from following his twitter profile and can therefore no longer enter his camera gear draws. But on the bright side, my remarks did earn me two followers.

Downgrading iPhone Firmware from 3.1.3 to 3.1.2

March 26th, 2010 § 1 Comment

It was a pretty long chain of unfortunate events that led me to accidentally upgrade to 3.1.3. I was sitting in my couch one day, watching TV, eating random junk food. My iPhone was running a jailbroken 3.1.2 with all my favorite apps. Life was good. And then I get a text message… I recognize the signature at the end of the message, but the caller ID is a phone number instead of the name it’s supposed to be. Puzzled, I fire up my contacts; All of my contacts are gone. I fire up the calendar; Nothing there. Same thing for the mail. So by now I’m wondering what is going on, try to reset my Google Sync setup, to no avail.

In a last effort to get my stuff back, I stepped in the trap that Apple set for me, and pressed the Restore button. I told myself, hey, there’s a tool to JB that version anyways, right? Nope there isn’t. I really want to stress this point: THERE IS NO GOOD JAILBREAKING TOOL FOR FIRMWARE 3.1.3! There is one tool out there that claims to hack previously jailbroken iPhones/iPod Touches by injecting a modified firmware image, but I and many others have not found any success. While the jailbreak seemed to have worked, I could not get any cellular reception from Rogers, which kind of defeats the purpose of having an iPhone in the first place. Don’t be lured by the very minor bugfixes, 3.1.3 is no good, no matter from what angle you look at it.

So there I was, stuck with a bone-stock iPhone. I might as well have dumped it in a lake, because as everyone knows, once you go jailbreak, the ugly and inefficient stock iPhone UI is unbearable at best. Something had to be done… but I had no idea what to do. Downloading firmware 3.1.2 and force overwriting it to your phone will not work, because with all the latest versions of iTunes, Apple has to authorize your reflash.

BUT! There is a but. I was able to reflash my phone to 3.1.2 using a pretty simple procedure. This will take a bit of your time, and it will probably be pretty scary, but it’s well worth the ability to jailbreak again. Please not that I am not responsible for whatever happens to your phone. Try this at your own risks only, and good luck on getting an RMA on a fucked up phone if it were to happen.

Follow the following:

  1. Get iTunes 8.1.2 and install it. Try using a spare computer if you can, because the older version will not want to install with iTunes 9 on your computer. You can always uninstall 9 and reinstall the other version… but then you get all the associated problems. Whatever, just get a working copy of 8.1.2.
  2. Fuck up your iPhone with Blackra1n. Yup, that’s right, you’ll want to voluntarily brick your phones software with Blackra1n. Chances are that if you’re not totally new to jailbreaking, you know Blackra1n; it’s probably the easiest to use jailbreaking app out there, but sadly it only works with 3.1.2. Run it nonetheless, and your iPhone will fall into a boot loop.
  3. Plug in your iPhone to your computer and force restore to 3.1.2. Don’t ask me why, but with your iPhone fucked up beyond repair, iTunes will skip the authorization process and install just about whatever valid firmware you feed it. It is still a good idea to turn off your internet while you are flashing. Shift click on Restore and point it to the firmware image for 3.1.2. Installation should be a tad longer, but otherwise pretty much to the point.
  4. Once your iPhone is restored, jailbreak once again. It’s that easy. Blackra1n should now work like a charm. At least it did for me. The baseband update didn’t seem to affect BR’s potency, although you can now forget any potential unlocking.

The latter worked for me in a Windows Vista SP2 environment with an early model iPhone 3Gs, and while I can’t confirm that it will work on all platforms with all devices, I don’t see why it shouldn’t. After all, the iTunes function which allows any unverified restore if the phone is a goner could very possibly be a planned customer care feature. But then again, since when does Apple do stuff for it’s customers?

That being said, if you’re not necessarily trying to get a quick fix, you might want to see if the steps work with the latest version of iTunes.

Pinging me back in case of success would most likely be very appreciated by both me and the jailbreak community as a whole. Drop a comment, copy to forums (with a link of course, net etiquette requires), pingback from your blog, whatever. As long as this info can get more people jailbroken, then I’m a happy man.

Epinions Review: D-Link DGS-1005D

March 2nd, 2010 § Leave a Comment

Every geek’s LAN takes on unhealthy proportions at some point or another. At first, it’s just two machines, his and her’s. Then a fileserver. Then a media server. Then a Bluray player. Next thing you know you know you’ve got network cables running through every room of your dwelling. When that happens, you need a switch.

Read the full review at Epinions.

[OCN] My Thoughts on Core i7

February 7th, 2009 § 3 Comments

Everybody knows that we, members of OCN, have a serious problem. Look at it from an average Joe perspective: we spend thousands on high end computers, and at every single occasion we go out and browse Newegg on a quest to find an upgrade for our systems, which according to us are quickly becoming obsolete. We then proceed to sell our memory, processors, graphic cards and all our other barely used gear, things which are sometimes only a couple of weeks old, in order to purchase the latest and greatest. While the common mortals still call a Pentium 4 HT/P965/7900GX2 system a top gaming machine, we constantly crave for more, more performance, more 3dMarks, smaller SuperPI times, and bigger e-peens. And after spending 50$ on Crysis:Warhead in order to be able to run the benchmark tool, we sit our asses on the chairs and play CS:S at framerates exceeding by 6 times our monitor’s refresh rates. We are hardware junkies, hung on PCB like a druggy is on PCP. 

Probably my best piece of to now. I spill my guts on what I think of the new Intel platform that features the new Core i7 processors and x58 motherboards. Read the entire article with feedback from the Overclock.net community here.

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