Archive for the ‘SSH’ tag
World’s knowledge at your fingertips - Wikipedia for offline use on your iPhone/iPod Touch


The title is right: you can install Wikipedia on your iPhone. Most articles on Wikipedia are there, in only 2GB of disk space. Sure, there are no pictures(nor other multimedia items), and the navigation is crappy, but after all… it’s Wikipedia on your iPhone, to read and to love whenever you’re offline.
In the author’s words:
What
An offline Wikipedia reader for the iPhone or iPod Touch. I wanted to write an iPhone app over Christmas, and so hacked this together during the break.
Why
It’s the warm fuzzy feeling of having the sum of all human knowledge in your pocket. It’s the hitchhiker’s guide to the galaxy realised. EDGE is slow; search is slow; you’re abroad, in a plane, a tunnel, or on top of a mountain. You have an iPod Touch.
Here’s the noob’s step-by-step guide on how to install it on your iPhone or iPod Touch.
How to fix Safari cookies logout bug on iPhone firmware 1.1.4
Remember I promised I’d introduce u to the many uses of having SSH and BSD installed on your iPhone. Here’s the first of a bunch of tips and hacks that will make your iPhone experience a lot less frustrating.
The bug:
On 1.1.4 firmware(and possibly 1.1.3), for some iPhone setups, after you log into a website from Safari, when you get back after having closed Safari, it’ll keep ask you to login.
Jailbroken iPhone Tutorial - Step 2 - Installing BSD subsystem and SSH

The second thing you do after jailbreaking the iPhone and importing the SIM contacts is, without a single doubt, installing one of the hundreds cool iPhone apps available on various Installer sources. In most cases, you’ll get away with only this. However, occasionally, some of the coolest apps will require a bit of advanced iPhone usage, and that’s what we’re gonna cover here.
You might have already heard some rumors about this, anyways here it is: the iPhone is a real computer, running a tiny stripped down version of Mac OSX, similar in many ways to what you have on your MacBook. In order to unleash its full potential, we’ll have to “unstrip” it a little bit by installing some of the tools found on Unix .


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