WARNING: Setting Your iPhone’s Date to January 1, 1970 Will Brick Your Device!!

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this bug affects not all iPhone . we are currently working on the solution.

 

Setting the date of your iPhone to January 1st, 1970 will brick your device, according to users across the web. The bug will affect any 64-bit iOS device that is powered by the A7, A8, A8X, A9, and A9X. 32-bit iOS devices are reportedly not affected by this issue.

Once your date has been set to January 1st, 1970, the bug will prevent your iOS device from booting. Due to the limited scroller, the date needs to be set back multiple times until it reaches the year 1970. Since a DFU or recovery mode restore will not unbrick your device, we strongly recommendthat you do not try to test this bug. Users report that while a restore may succeed, the device will still fail to boot after the restore.

The bug is suspected to be related to the UNIX timestamp epoch. Due to time-zone settings, the date is causing a bit-underflow, which crashes the kernel.

Hopefully Apple will release a software update that fixes this and unbricks any devices impacted by this bug.

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Wishing you a prosperous Year Of The Monkey!

Chinese Calligraphy 2015

 

iPhonenology ,wishes you a prosperous Year Of The Monkey!

Good health & Good Luck

GONG XI FA CAI !! HUAT AH !

We are close from 6/2/2016 – 10/2/2016

As we know how important your iPhone is to you during the lunar new year celebrations, iPhonenology will be celebrating alongside you all the way through!

Call us anytime for an appointment during this CNY period.

 iPhonenology. block 2 balestier road . #01-655 singapore 320002. just opposite thomson medical center. call/msg/whatsapp : 96867788

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Apple Recalls AC Wall Plug Adapters for Six Countries

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Apple today announced a voluntary recall of AC wall plug adapters designed for use in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Continental Europe, New Zealand and South Korea. In very rare cases, affected Apple two-prong wall plug adapters may break and create a risk of electrical shock if touched. These wall plug adapters shipped with Mac and certain iOS devices between 2003 and 2015 and were also included in the Apple World Travel Adapter Kit. Apple is aware of 12 incidents worldwide.

The recall does not affect any other Apple AC wall plug adapters designed for Canada, China, Hong Kong, Japan, United Kingdom, United States or any Apple USB power adapters.

An affected wall plug adapter has 4 or 5 characters or no characters on the inside slot where it attaches to an Apple power adapter. Redesigned adapters have a 3-letter regional code in the slot (EUR, KOR, AUS, ARG or BRA).

Apple is asking customers to stop using affected plug adapters.

You can visit the link below for details on how to begin the exchange process.

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