Your best source of information and news about apple stuff, iphone and iphone nano on the internet
iPhone REVIEW TOP 50 iPhone VIDEOS iPhone CARD iPhone SOFT

December 27th, 2007

You are currently browsing the articles from iPhone nano - Apple iPhone Articles written on December 27th, 2007.

2007 in review: The iPhone and iPod dominate

One of the most successful years in Apple's history was fueled by the popularity of both the iPhone and the iPod. Dan Moren looks at the major developments of 2007 involving these two handheld product lines.


Original story at rss.macworld.com . Related stories include: 2007 in review: The iPhone and iPod - The iPod , iLife - Best Of New Orleans and ... Macworld , InformationWeek

View all 5 related news and blogs, plus related videos, photos and more at Boxxet for Apple iPhone.

Written by Apple iPhone - best news, blogs, videos, photos and more - Boxxet on December 27th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone card.

Installing SSH Client on 1.1.2 iPhone (intel / PPC Mac)(Windows XP / Vista)


(Windows XP / Vista)
Once you have installed an SSH server on the iPhone, you need a way to communicate with that server. I'll show you how to install WinSCP, which is going to make hacking the iPhone a lot easier. WinSCP is a program similar to an FTP client where you can drag and drop files from your computer to a remote computer (in this case your iPhone).


  1. You need to know what IP address is being assigned to your iPhone. Press the "Home" button, "Settings", "Wi-Fi", select the name of your network by pressing the blue arrow on the right, then look where it says IP Address. On my iPhone it is 10.0.1.3.

  2. Next press "Home", "Settings", "General", "Auto-Lock", then select "Never". This will keep the iPhone from disconnecting the SSH connection while working with the program.

  3. Download WinSCP which you can get for free here. I downloaded the "Installation package" for WinSCP 4.0.5. Install and start the program. At the WinSCP program enter the following information. Host name 10.0.1.3 (or your IP address), User name root, Password alpine. Now go to the File protocol drop down box and select "SCP". Click "Login".

  4. It's slow to login to the iPhone so you'll probably get this warning screen. Don't click the "Abort" button. Just be patient.

  5. YOu'll get a warning screen I got. Just click "Yes".

  6. This is the program interface. In its default state it shows the directory structure of the computer in the left side window, and the directory structure of the iPhone in the right side window. At this point you can drag and drop files to and from the iPhone and to and from your computer. You can also right click files and perform various functions like renaming and deleting and setting permissions.

Warning



  • Running an SSH server on the iPhone has two inherent problems. The first is security. The password is known to be alpine. You were given the option to change this in the Step 1 guide when you used the 1.1.2 jailbreak program. If you didn't set a custom password in the Step 1 guide, no worries, here is how you change it using PuTTY. Login to your iPhone via SSH normally. Then type: passwd You will be prompted to enter a new password. You won't see it as you enter it though. You will then be prompted to enter it again. It must be at least five characters long. That's it.

  • The second problem with some versions of SSH, is battery drain. The battery can be drained if your version of SSH uses an active listener program that constantly waits for a login attempt so it can initiate the connection. When you used OktoPrep to aid in jailbreaking 1.1.2, part of the process was an option to install SSH, which came with a control panel to shut it off whenever you wanted. You should shut off SSH when not in use. Launch the SSH application. Slide the switch to turn it on or off. It seems like this application may have the ability to change the password at some point in the future.

(intel / PPC Mac) What I used: OS X (10.4.10 & 10.5)



  1. Once you have installed an SSH server on the iPhone (which was done if you used OktoPrep), you need a good way to communicate with that server. The Terminal, while useful, is limiting. Perhaps Homer Simpson said it best, years ago: Fugu me! I'll show you how to install Fugu, which is going to make hacking the iPhone a lot easier. Fugu is a graphical frontend to Mac OS X's command-line Secure File Transfer application (SFTP). SFTP is similar to FTP, but unlike FTP, the entire session is encrypted, meaning no passwords are sent in cleartext form, and is thus much less vulnerable to third-party interception

  2. On your iPhone, press Home, "Settings", "General", "Auto-Lock", then select "Never". This will keep the iPhone from disconnecting the SSH connection while using Fugu. Don't forget to set this back to 1 minute when you are done or your screen will never shut off, and your battery will run down very quickly.

  3. Before we can continue, we need to know what IP address is being assigned to your iPhone by your router. Press the Home button, Settings, Wi-Fi, select the name of your network by pressing the blue arrow on the right, then look where it says "IP Address". On my iPhone it is 10.0.1.5.

  4. Download Fugu here. Note: many FTP programs can be used to make this connection as well. I know Transmit is another popular application used to connect to the iPhone. Launch Fugu. In the Connect to: field enter your iPhone's IP. In the Username field enter root. In the Port: field enter 22. In the Directory: field enter /. Click "Connect". It could take up to 1 minute to login to Fugu on your first attempt.

  5. You will get a pop up. Just click "Continue".

  6. You should be at this screen. Your computer is on the left, your iPhone on the right. You can now transfer files between the two, install programs, make folders, set permissions, and delete anything you want with Fugu. I'll cover more of its functions as I need them in other tutorials. This is a drag and drop method of transferring files which is nice.

Warning



  • Running an SSH server on the iPhone has two inherent problems. The first is security. The password is known to be alpine. You were given the option to change this in the Step 1 guide when you used the 1.1.2 jailbreak program. If you didn't set a custom password in the Step 1 guide, no worries, here is how you change it using the Terminal. Login to your iPhone via SSH normally. Then type: passwd You will be prompted to enter a new password. You won't see it as you enter it though. You will then be prompted to enter it again. It must be at least five characters long. That's it.

  • The second problem with some versions of SSH, is battery drain. The battery can be drained if your version of SSH uses an active listener program that constantly waits for a login attempt so it can initiate the connection. When you used OktoPrep to aid in jailbreaking 1.1.2, part of the process was an option to install SSH, which came with a control panel to shut it off whenever you wanted. You should shut off SSH when not in use. Launch the SSH application. Slide the switch to turn it on or off. It seems like this application may have the ability to change the password at some point in the future.

IF SOMEONE HAS A QUESTION OR AN ERROR SEND ME AN EMAIL AND WE'LL TRY TO RESOLVE IT.


Written by iPhone Hack on December 27th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone card.

1.1.2 Firmware Installing AppTapp (AppSnapp) via SSH - or any third party application (Windows XP / Vista)(intel / PPC Mac)


(intel / PPC Mac)

Many have asked me how they get AppTapp or AppSnapp onto an already jailbroken and activated iPhone. Obviously if you are on firmware 1.0.2 and lower you can still download the older program and connect via USB to get it installed. There are situations where you can run into bootstrap errors though. Since AppSnapp is installed via the jailbreak 1.1.1 method there is no program to download per se since it is part of the exploit. This process is probably most valuable for anyone running 1.1.1 firmware and below as I'm not sure how you would have SSH installed on a 1.1.2 iPhone but not have used AppSnapp to do it. Nonetheless, here are the instructions. This will only work if you have SSH already installed on the iPhone. These instructions can be applied to any third party application that gets intalled in the /Applications folder. Just ensure the binary program inside the folder (usually named the same thing as the application) has 0755 permissions set. I'm assuming you've jailbroken/activated and installed Installer and/or SSH on your iPhone already. If not then do it now.


  1. Download the Installer program (version 3.0b8) here. Decompress the download and you'll be left with this file. Place it anywhere you'd like on your computer.

  2. Launch Fugu and navigate to your /Applications folder.

  3. Drag your Installer.app folder into the /Applications folder. Make sure you do not drag it into one of the folders already in /Applications. It might be easier to scroll to the bottom of the list to find a space to drop it into.

  4. Once it is copied over, double click the Installer.app folder on the iPhone. Verify the permissions on the Installer file. They should show triple X.

  5. This is how to change the permissions if you need to. Right click the Installer file and select Get Info.

  6. Check the three Execute boxes and click Apply. (On the pop up)

  7. Restart the iPhone. Or if you're a smart one, issue the killall SpringBoard command instead. There's your new program.

(Windows XP / Vista)



  1. Download the Installer program (version 3.0b8) here. Decompress the download and you'll be left with this file. Place it anywhere you'd like on your computer.

  2. Download WinSCP which you can get for free here. and navigate to your /Applications folder.

  3. Drag your Installer.app folder into the /Applications folder. Make sure you do not drag it into one of the folders already in /Applications. It might be easier to scroll to the bottom of the list to find a space to drop it into.

  4. Once it is copied over, double click the Installer.app folder on the iPhone. Verify the permissions on the Installer file. They should show triple X. In this example they don't.

  5. This is how to change the permissions if you need to. Right click the Installer file and select Properties.

  6. Check the three X boxes and click OK. (on the pop up)

  7. Restart the iPhone. Or if you're a smart one, issue the killall SpringBoard command instead. There's your new program.

Written by iPhone Hack on December 27th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone card.

Analyst: Apple will hit $600 in 18 months

Apple's stock price repeatedly rose this week to finally break the $200 mark yesterday in afternoon trading, but one financial analyst expects the Cupertino-based company to reach $600 within 18 months. "There's so much growth to look forward to for the iPhone," said Stephen Coleman, chief investment officer at Daedalus Capital. Coleman said Apple ...


Original story at MacNN . Related stories include: How High Can Apple Go? $600 a Share? - GigaOM , Patch: New update for iPhone - iTWire and ... GigaOm

View all 4 related news and blogs, plus related videos, photos and more at Boxxet for Apple iPhone.

Written by Apple iPhone - best news, blogs, videos, photos and more - Boxxet on December 27th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone card.

Apple Files For Software DRM Patent


This might be a stretch, but it's worth a look. Apple Inc. has filed for a patent for a Digital Rights Management system for controlling where software can run. It involves injecting a special piece of code into an application's run-time instruction stream that constantly checks and re-checks to see if it is being run on an authorized platform.Should all of these checks fail, the software into which the code was injected would cease to function and become inoperable. The patent describes this as being, "transparent to the user and impossible to circumvent."This would also be usable to limit Apple software like Mac OS X to be limited to only Apple hardware, restricting the use of Mac OS X on Mac machines.On the other hand, and this is simply speculation on my own part, it is possible (though I hope untrue) that this software might also be used to certify applications running on the iPhone and iPod touch. While it might be a bit of a stretch, it's possible.

Written by iPhone Hack on December 27th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone card.

« Older articles

Newer articles »