
Sure enough, it copied everything back to my iPhone (apps, songs, settings, etc.) which took a while.įinally, I re-jailbroke with limera1n and here I am, on iOS 4.1 w/ baseband 01.59. I then did a Restore in iTunes when it asked me if I wanted to set up as a new phone or restore from my last iPhone (backup, I guess), so I clicked on the latter.

I checked if it worked, and sure enough, it was on iOS 4.1 with the baseband at 01.59.00. In my case, it finally said "iPhone activated" but it wiped everything out except what's in the iOS 4.1 software bundle. Just re-jailbreak with Limera1n after you successfully upgrade to iOS 4.1 while keeping your modem firmware (baseband) intact at 01.59.00. There is no reason to be all up in arms about it, though.

I see that a bunch of people were surprised that this basically removed their Jailbreak from their iPhone's, so maybe that should be added as the last step. the Option key) and click on Restore without letting go" Tinyumbrella For Windows 10 TinyUmbrella 64 bit is a mobile phone tool that provides iPhone users with a valuable service of restoring their jailbroken iPhone to another firmware.

It should read "Open iTunes and Hit Alt(a.k.a. Version History: Old versions of TinyUmbrella: Current version: TinyUmbrella 9.3.4 (36.33 MB): Release status: Major release with minor updates and a revised build.
#Old tinyumbrella install#
TinyUmbrella creates a false Apple server that gives your device the green light to install any build that you have saved SHSH blobs for. The error is where it says "Open iTunes and then Hit Shift and Restore". In layman’s terms, they contain device-specific information which can be used to sign IPSWs of old firmware versions, allowing you to downgrade even after Apple has stopped signing them. Well, as I said in a reply to someone towards the beginning of the thread, there is one error in the instructions, one omission and they are somewhat incomplete.
