The combined efforts of the iPhone Dev Team and Chronic Dev Team proved to be victorious last week when a new jailbreak tool called GreenPois0n Absinthe was released to public. This new tool was significant to the jailbreak community because it allowed users to jailbreak their A5 devices (iPhone 4S and iPad 2) after several months of waiting. Now that the wait is over, here’s our 5-step guide to jailbreaking your A5 iDevices with GreenPois0n Absinthe. Continue reading →
All posts tagged chronic dev team
The Untethered Jailbreak for A5 iDevices Has Been Released
It’s official: the iPhone 4S and iPad 2 have finally been jailbroken. Late last night, MuscleNerd from the iPhone Dev Team tweeted that the A5 jailbreak was on the verge of being ready for public release. The jailbreak “dream team” just had to work out a few kinks in the actual jailbreak software and they’d release it shortly after. Well now that time has come. Continue reading →
How To: Jailbreak iOS 5.0.1 Untethered Using Redsn0w and Corona
Earlier today we saw that both the Chronic Dev Team and the iPhone Dev Team have released their respective tools to jailbreak an untethered version iOS 5.0.1. Some of you may have already jailbroke iOS 5.0.1 using an earlier version of the iPhone Dev Team’s redsn0w. Unfortunately that specific exploit left you with a tethered (meaning devices required connecting to a computer to boot) version of iOS 5.0.1. But all that is a thing of the past, and users can now jailbreak their A4 iDevices using redsn0w and Corona. Continue reading →
Chronic Dev Team Needs Your Help For Future Jailbreaks
Joshua Hill (AKA posixninja) of the Chronic Dev Team vaguely tweeted Saturday night about an upcoming blog post on GreenPois0n.com. Many jailbreak fans were expecting the post to reveal a new jailbreak for the iPhone 4S, but once the update was published a new agenda of the Chronic Dev Team was revealed. Titled Weapons of Mass Exploitation, the blog post tells the tale of potential jailbreak exploits being patched by Apple before the dev team even had a chance to release it to the public. Hill then goes on to explain the new approach to discovering future jailbreak exploits. Continue reading →













