Well, it's pretty clear from many user reports, and from comments in the technical press that many people DO have significant problems with itunes. When I will move my lab I will have to start fresh, and it is really unlikely I will stick with Apple. These guys ARE morons, and it is embarrassing to be associated with them even by just being a customer of the same company. Apple Store) and then tell me the presentation and the customers there don´t remind you of some bizarre cult. On any other day, just go to your nearest iTemple (a.k.a. I went to Munich to buy crampons on the day the last iphone was rolled out, and just off Marienplatz there were queues hundreds of meters long where people were standing in the rain for the privilege of buying the first, buggy version of a new bloody telephone! By putting style over substance they manage to recruit a fanbase of idiots that would probably buy ibog paper that can change its smoothness by voice command (and sends images to the NSA.), and are now incredibly successful. Problem is, they would probably have gone under. I really wish they would have stuck to their original user friendly and robust approach rather than integrate everything to the point it breaks. I am typing this from a MacPro, own an iPhone and a Macbook Pro, and have been using Macs since the times of the old SE cube. But even if you are just playing games you must know that you cannot copy your gaming progress to other devices anymore and you cannot feed emulators like “Gridlee” (see ) or “Floppy Cloud” (see ) with fresh games anymore – but Apple is taking your money for this …īut hey, keep on arguing for them and give them your money.But unfortunately true, at least in parts. Maybe the most of you are not working with your iOS devices. In my opinion that is a valid point for other systems! I am really angry now! I am working with that machine and I NEED that kind of access – period! As a long lasting Apple shareholder I cannot imagine how they will be able to gain ground in the business area when they are continuously shutting down our possibilities for accessing data. After downloading the right version of iOS 8.2 you must start iTunes, connect your device and hold down the option key while pressing the restore button, then choose the firmware – but hurry!) (For those who want to know how: At the moment it is still possible with a firmware from. I have downgraded an iPad Air 2 to iOS 8.2 because of this. IFunBox at least has released an update that fixes some of the issue - it will allow apps with iTunes File sharing enabled to be browsed - but otherwise non-jailbreakers are left out in the cold for now. Apple has definitely changed something with the way apps can be accessed in iOS.” All iDevice transfer utilities seem to be experiencing this exact same blocked access in iOS 8.3, so it’s not just a bug with iExplorer or iBrowse. Before there is a solution, iFunbox will fail to open data directory of any App if the device is not jailbroken.”Īnother popular file explorer app, iExplorer, is also investigating the issue: “We are currently investigating how the iOS 8.3 update blocked access to the Apps directory, and we are looking into ways around it. Now we totally lost the control of Apps on our own devices. Previously only writing is block in executable directory. “Apple blocked access of the entire sandbox directory of every installed App since iOS 8.3. “iOS 8.3 ruined our freedom of controlling data in our installed Apps and Games,” writes iFunBox in a Facebook post. The apps were previously a popular way for users to install software on iOS devices that Apple does not allow in the App Store, like game emulators. Many popular file transfer apps, such as iFunBox, iTools, iExplorer, iBackupBot and PhoneView, have experienced the issue that prevents users from accessing file directories for apps on iOS devices. Apple has seemingly moved to block desktop apps that allow users to manage files on their iOS devices in its recent iOS 8.3 update, as noted by MacRumors.
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