Tips to Fix Electra Jailbreak for iOS 11.3.1 – iOS 11.2 Problems
#1. Enable Airplane mode & Turn Off Siri
Access the Control Center, and tap on Airplane toggle to enable it.
Coolstar has also recommended disabling Siri mode before using Electra Jailbreak. Launch the Settings app and navigate to Siri and Search, and tap on Listen for “Hey Siri” amd Press Home button for Siri or Press Side Button for Siri toggle and tap Turn Off Siri.
After enabling Airplane mode and disabling Siri, reboot your iOS device. When you reboot your iPhone, the Airplane mode may get disabled. So don’t forget to re-enable it.
#2. Delete iOS Software Update
coolstar has recommended to delete iOS Software update before using the Electra Jailbreak. To delete the iOS Software Update, launch the Settings app and navigate to General > iPhone Storage > iOS 11.4 (or any other iOS software update you see in the list), tap on it, then tap Delete Update, and then Delete Update in the confirmation popup to delete the iOS software update. You may also want to install the tvOS profile to block iOS software updates from being downloaded automatically.
You should delete the iOS software update if you’re getting the rootfs remount error.
#3. Turn off Passcode & Find My iPhone
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Christian, one of our readers, has commented that he was able to successful jailbreak iOS 11.3.1 using Electra Jailbreak after also disabling Passcode and Find My iPhone. Christian’s tip seems to have helped other readers as well. Thanks Christian!
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To disable the passcode, launch the Settings app, and tap on Face ID and Passcode or Touch ID & Passcode, enter the Passcode, then tap Turn Off Passcode to disable it.
To turn off Find My iPhone, navigate to Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Find My iPhone, then tap on the Find My iPhone toggle. Enter the Apple ID and password when prompted to turn it off.
I was able to jailbreak iOS 11.3.1 after disabling the passcode, but I didn’t have to turn off Find my iPhone.
#4. Keep Trying
We had to try multiple times to successfully jailbreak iOS 11.3.1 on your iPhones. So keep trying. If the jailbreak is successful, you should see the Cydia on the Home screen.
Launch the Electra app and keep trying until it works.
#5. Cydia Keeps Crashing
It means that your iOS device is still not in a jailbreak state. Launch the Electra app, you may see Enable Jailbreak, tap on it to jailbreak your iOS device. We were able to successfully jailbreak iOS 11.3.1 after trying this multiple times.
iOS 12.3, tvOS 12.3 Betas Introduce Apple’s Revamped TV App
Earlier today, Apple officially seeded the first developer betas of both iOS 12.3 and tvOS 12.3.
While the new pieces of software are minor in scale in the grand scheme of things, it turns out that they are not completely without their new additions. Specifically, both developer betas introduce the first vision of Apple’s new and revamped TV app, which the company unveiled earlier this month.
The new TV app is designed to be the one-stop-shop for Apple’s video efforts, both in original content with the future release of Apple TV+, but as well as purchased content through iTunes and third-party subscription services like Starz and HBO. With a more important role in Apple’s services, Apple saw fit to revamp and improve the overall TV app. Today’s developer betas show that incoming change.
The new TV app will still start with the “Watch Now” section. This area is meant to show you what you’ve been watching, and let you keep tabs on any series you’re currently making your way through. It will show the next episode to watch from any services tied to it, as well as suggest new movies and shows to watch based on advanced machine learning features baked into the “For You” feature.
There is even a dedicated section for Kids in the revamped app, which will make it easier for parents to keep tabs on the content their kids are watching, as well as find new shows and films.
The new Apple TV also includes “Channels”. This is a way for users to quickly subscribe to third-party services like HBO, Starz, and others, and access that content from within the app directly. The beta seeds of both iOS 12.3 and tvOS 12.3 both offer support for Channels now, and you can even sign up for free trials of some services if you’re so inclined.
While this is a solid start, it’s still missing one giant feature:
Apple TV+, which Apple also announced this month. That is the company’s big leap into original content, both in film and tv series. Once that subscription service launches later this year, the new TV app will also house that feature as well.
Our Take
The new, revamped TV app is pretty great looking, and it should serve its purpose well once it launches to the public later this year. Personally, these changes are all well and good, but I’m looking forward to Apple TV+ getting added to the mix.
We Want To Hear From You
What do you think of the new design and Channels?
[images via
MacRumors]
Apple this summer will introduce the
Apple Card, a new credit card that it's offering in partnership with Goldman Sachs. Apple presented the Apple Card at its March 25 event and launched an Apple Card website, but there were still many questions about how it will work.
TechCrunch's Matthew Panzarino today shared some new details on the Apple Card that were provided by Apple, giving a little more insight into how it will work and answering a few of the questions we saw from MacRumors readers.
First and foremost, Apple Card is not going to support multiple users. People who use a single account with two shared credit cards at the current time are not going to be able to do the same thing with Apple Card. It's one card per person and one card per account.
There is no cost associated with the physical Apple Card, even though it's made of laser-etched titanium. Apple isn't going to charge you for the card itself and there isn't going to be a penalty fee if you lose it and need a replacement. There is an in-app option to freeze your card in the event that it's stolen.
Speaking of the physical Apple Card, Apple has implemented a neat activation method - you'll just tap it against the iPhone when you get it, without the need to place a phone call for activation like you have to do with existing credit and debit cards. When using the physical card, no signatures will be required.
Though it's tap to activate, the physical card itself isn't going to support contactless payments. You need your iPhone for that.
Paying your balance can be done in the Wallet app using a linked bank account or
Apple Pay Cash, and while not mentioned by TechCrunch, there is an option with Apple PayCash to get an emailed statement, so Apple will presumably offer the same option with Apple Card. There's no word on whether transactions can be imported into financial software like Quicken as of yet.
As for fees, there are no foreign transaction fees but the exchange rate for foreign transactions is determined by Mastercard. Making a late payment will not result in penalty rates, aka increased interest rates. You're still going to have to pay interest on the outstanding balance, and a late payment will impact credit score, but interest rates won't increase.
TechCrunch says that when it comes to interest rates, Apple will make an effort to sign you up at the lower end of the interest rate tier that you qualify for.
While Apple Card's interest rates fail to break the mold in any major way (they are roughly between 13-24%), Apple will place users who sign up at the lower end of the tier that they land in due to their credit score. This isn't some incredible re-imagining of how to offer credit or an intensely low interest option, but it could shift you to the bottom of a tier when you qualify instead of paying a few points higher at your 'exact' score.
As Apple announced on Monday, there are no credit card numbers or other information on the physical titanium Apple Card. This data is instead available in the app, leaving some questions about online purchases where you often need a number and a CVV.
Apple Card is able to generate virtual card numbers for these kinds of purchases. The Wallet app will provide a virtual card number and a virtual confirmation code, with the number being semi-permanent and able to be regenerated whenever you want. This info can be used for non-Apple Pay online purchases, over-the-phone purchases, and other similar situations.
There is not, however, support for single-use numbers or single-merchant numbers for having separate card numbers for different merchants. Purchases will be further protected by a one-time use dynamic security code, and two-factor authentication will need to be turned on for you to use Apple Card.
When it comes to privacy, Apple said on stage that it won't know what you're buying or how much you spent, and its partner, Goldman Sachs, will not be selling or using data for external or internal marketing or advertising.
There's one other neat tidbit about Apple Card that's worth pointing out, which, while wasn't included in TechCrunch's details, has been circulating on Twitter. Apple Card uses different colors to categorize and code your purchases for labeling purposes, with entertainment in pink, food in orange, shopping in yellow, and so on.
It appears that when you use Apple Pay, the color of your card in the Wallet app will have a rainbow gradient based on your spending habits, so if you're buying a lot of food and purchasing a lot of movie tickets, it'll trend toward orange and pink.

Maksim Petriv
✔@talkaboutdesign
Anyone else notice this? Looks like the gradient on Apple Card is directly tied to transaction categories from your spending pattern.
#applecard @viticci @reneritchie @gruber #uxdesign
334
6:23 AM - Mar 28, 2019
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TechCrunch has some additional details on privacy and security that are well worth reading through for those interested in the Apple Card, and
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Apple Was Unable to Ink Apple News+ Deals With WaPo and NYT Despite 'Vigorous Courtship'
Apple was desperate to secure deals with The Washington Post or The New York Timesfor its recently announced
Apple News+ service but was ultimately unable to persuade them to sign up despite a "vigorous courtship," according to a new report from
Vanity Fair.
Shortly after Apple's Texture deal last spring, Apple began discussions with the two news sites, putting a "tremendous" amount of pressure on them and promising to significantly increase their readership.
"
Eddy Cue was in and out of their offices really trying to woo them." Cue's elevator pitch, according to people familiar with the discussions, was, "We'll make you the most-read newspaper in the world."
Apple was aiming for access to the full content from the two newspapers, rather than a pared down offering or a selection of stories on a specific set of topics. Apple is said to have not wanted "limitations in terms of content."
Neither The New York Times nor The Washington Post could be convinced to join Apple News+. Both publications have successful online subscription offerings already. The New York Times charges $15 per month for a basic digital subscription, while The Washington Post charges $10. The newspapers get to keep 100 percent of the revenue brought in by those subscriptions.
Apple wanted to include full access to the content from the news sites for the $9.99 per month asking price of Apple News+. According to prior reports, Apple keeps 50 percent of the subscription revenue for Apple News+ and splits the other 50 percent among publishers based on how much time is spent consuming their content.
If The New York Times and The Washington Post joined Apple News+, their existing subscribers would have little reason to keep paying them $10 to $15 per month instead of paying the $9.99 subscription to Apple News+, which would also include other news content and magazines. Apple believes its huge subscriber base would ultimately bring more readers to the news sites, but neither newspaper was swayed by that argument.
Meredith Kopit Levin, the chief operating officer for The New York Times, told Vanity Fairthat the newspaper wants to have a direct relationship with its readers.
"We've been pretty deliberate about saying that the best place you can experience journalism is through a relationship with a news provider. So far for us, that has meant a direct relationship with users. The more we have a relationship with users, the better we think our business will be, and the better the experience that we can provide to them."
A spokesperson for The Washington Post said that the paper's focus is on growing its own subscription base, which meant joining Apple News+ "just did not make sense" at the current time.
While Apple was not able to secure deals with either The Washington Post nor The New York Times, it did ink a deal with The Wall Street Journal. The full content from The Wall Street Journal is unlocked for Apple News+ subscribers even though a standard subscription starts at $19.49 per month for the first year, after which it goes up to $38.99.
There are caveats, though. A limited selection of general news and opinion pieces are promoted through Apple News+, and other content from The Wall Street Journal must be manually searched for. Apple News+ also only provides three days worth of archives from The Wall Street Journal.
According to Vanity Fair, The Wall Street Journal has less to lose than other news sites. Its main subscriber base consists of corporate accounts and "high net-worth individuals" interested in business and finance news rather than the more general news content that will be promoted via Apple News+.
Apple has also secured deals with hundreds of magazines, and much of Apple News+ comprises access to magazines like National Geographic, Vogue, The New Yorker, and other high profile titles. Magazines also have less to lose than digital sites already offering subscriptions as most don't have established digital subscription businesses.
Publications that do not have large audiences paying for digital access each month have the potential to be more successful with Apple News, but for sites like The New York Times and The Washington Post, there's a real risk that joining would cannibalize existing subscribers.
It's not yet clear if Apple News+ will ultimately be successful for Apple's media partners, and it's possible that if it is, news sites that have declined joining will do so in the future.
For more on Apple News+, make sure to
check out our full guide on the subscription service.
iPhone 11 Concept Envisions Triple Camera Setup, Punch-Hole Notch, and 100W Fast ChargingThe iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Max are still a few months away from launch. Until September arrives and we get to have our first look at the 2019 iPhones, there’s a new iPhone 11 concept that we can drool over.
The concept envisions the iPhone 11 with a design language similar to the 2018 iPad Pro, triple cameras at the rear, a 6.1-inch QHD+ Super Retina OLED panel protected by Gorilla Glass 6, and a punch-hole style notch right in the middle. The concept also envisions Apple shipping a USB-C cable with 2019 iPhones and bundling an ultra-fast 100W charger in the box.
The video also shows an Apple Pencil alongside the iPhone 11, though Apple is unlikely to add support for it to the iPhone lineup anytime soon. Interestingly, the iPhone 11 Max has a different camera layout from the regular iPhone 11 in the concept video. That, however, is unlikely to happen. Apple may reserve the triple camera set up at the rear for higher storage variants of the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Max but the design is going to be the same. The third new camera sensor will feature an ultra-wide angle shooter as seen on the Galaxy S10 and Huawei Mate 20 Pro/P30 series.
Our Take
Ultimately, this concept video shows an iPhone 11 that’s way too cool for reality. While Xiaomi has teased a 100W fast charging technology, we are yet to see such tech being used in mainstream smartphones. And Apple continues to stick to 5W charging on its iPhones so it would be far too of a stretch to think the company will include a 100W charger with the iPhone 11 this year. Similarly, the notch design shown in the video is simply not practical as it won’t leave Apple with any space to include the TrueDepth sensors required for Face ID.
What do you think about this iPhone 11 concept?