What’s up guys! Now it’s time to look up the new iOS 10.2/10.1.1/10 and 9 compatible cydia tweaks & apps released for iPhone/iPad which you might missed in this week. When new tweaks are released in cydia, we're so excited to install it but due to lack of time management we don’t get a chance to look at Cydia.
Every tweak brings some new features for customizing our iDevices. There are number of jailbreak tweaks that are released every day. But trying all of them is time consuming or some don’t work properly which may result in creating problem to your device.Must Read:iPhone backup extractor reviews
Cydia Tweaks of the Week
So here we come up with "Cydia Tweaks of the Week" with new released cydia tweaks compatible with 10.2/10.1.1 & below for iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch that you might missed this week. These all tweaks are just tested & work fine and are available in Cydia via BigBoss & ModMyi Repo.
Take a look at new released Jailbreak tweaks of the week Compatible with iOS 10.2/10.1.1/10/9 that you might have missed
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Vespera - Repo: BigBoss, Price: $0.99
Croutons – Repo: BigBoss, Price: Free
NoLSPowerDown Repo: BigBoss, Price: Free
ScreenshotXI – Repo: BigBoss, Price: $1.00
Edgify – Repo: BigBoss, Price: $0.99
ByeThirdParty – Repo: BigBoss, Price: Free
SMSNoLinkOpen – Repo: BigBoss, Price: Free
Which one is your favorite tweak?
To get all these tweaks your device need to be jailbroken. If your device has not yet jailbroken then follow this simple steps on How to Jailbreak iOS 9.2- 9.3.3 Using English version of Pangu app and Cydia Impactor [Windows]
It is a premium smartphone that tries to offer the best experience to the premium consumer.
What does an iPhone need?
It needs to be fast. It needs an amazing camera and screen. It needs to be portable and well designed. It needs to run the most modern iOS there is. Finally, it has to fit the needs to millions of people. Sponsor ads:
When you ask yourself, “What is an iPhone?” and “What does an iPhone need?”, you realize the best iPhone is, unarguably, the iPhone 7.
The iPhone 7 is the best iPhone as of 8/11/17. It has the best screen, camera, performance, OS, and features of any iPhone because it was simply the last iPhone released.
Many people complain that it doesn't have a headphone jack. However, very few of these people have actually tried quality BlueTooth headphones.
Many people will find the weirdest things to complain about but these people have never tried the actual phone.
In the end, the latest released iPhone will ALWAYS be the best iPhone model because it uses best hardware/internals and newest software. While people will always complain, they are usually misinformed
After a long wait, team Phoenix has released a Jailbreak for iOS 9.3.5. The Jailbreak runs on all 32 bits iPhone/iPad running iOS 9.3.5. Since iOS 9.3.5 is the last iOS update for iOS 9, hackers might have found it possible to Jailbreak iOS 9.3.5.
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The Jailbreak process for iOS 9.3.5 is same as the previous one. All you need is a computer, an iPA file and a software to Jailbreak your iOS 9.3.5 running devices. So let’s begin…
How to Jailbreak iOS 9.3.5 using Phoenix on iPhone/iPad ?
Before you start to download Jailbreak app and start Jailbreaking your device, make sure your device is 32 bit and is running iOS 9.3.5.
Note: This Jailbreak is not for iPhone 5S, iPhone 6/6S, iPhone 7/7Plus
Step 2: Also Download and Install Cydia Impactor from here
Step 3: Once the files are downloaded, connect your iPhone or iPad to the computer using a cable
Step 4: Run Cydia Impactor
Step 5: Drag the IPA file that you have downloaded on the top field of the Cydia Impactor app
Step 6: It will ask you to enter your Apple ID and Password. Simply Enter the Apple ID and Password that you are currently using it on your iPhone or iPad
Step 7: Now you will see a new icon on your device’s Home Screen. It will not work until you Trust it by going to Settings – General – Device Management and Tap Trust
Step 8: Now Launch the app from your iPhone or iPad
Step 9: Tap on “Prepare for Jailbreak” tab
Step 10: It will then go through all the process to Jailbreak and the device will respring.
Step 11: That’s it. Your device is now Jailbroken.
Let us know if you find it difficult to Jailbreak your device
This concept iPhone 8 gets rid of the empty spaces
The HomePod firmware revealed that the iPhone 8 would feature a bezel-less display with no physical home button. However, there will be a cutout at the top to accommodate the ear speaker, front camera, and other sensors. The 10th anniversary iPhone, code named D22, will likely be unveiled next month alongside the iPhone 7S and 7S Plus, and would ship sometime in October/November. Must Read:iPhone white screen
We don’t know how Apple will program the iOS 11 to take advantage of the iPhone 8’s design upgrades. Designer Allen Pike pointed out that on current iPhones, “Large Title” banners are placed below the navigation buttons in most of the apps. It leaves plenty of empty white space on current iPhones that could be put to better use.Sponsor ads:
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There is no unique and 100% correct solution to this issue. And you have to try and try. And sometimes it is not because of iTunes itself.
After searching, we found one fix is the most useful, which is Go to Control Panel > Programs > Apple Software Update > Repair. And then reinstall iTunes 6464Steup.exe”.
Of course, there are some other tips Apple suggests and you can try if the solution above doesn’t work.
A basic deep-linking system for an app has two goals:
If the app is installed, open it and take the user to the content requested.
If the app is not installed, take the user somewhere else so they can download it.
Apple’s official deep-linking standard, “universal links,” is designed for the first case. It’s not perfect: Configuration is complicated, and there are many places (Facebook, Twitter and any app using SFSafariViewController, to name a few) where things don’t “just work.” But the user experience of deep-linking into an app is generally quite good once that app is installed. None of this has changed in iOS 10.3.
It’s the second case where iOS 10.3 makes things complicated. If a user doesn’t have your app installed, they have always ended up in Safari, looking at the web version of that link. You are then responsible for redirecting that user to download the app. Because Apple has not implemented universal links for the App Store, developers have had to rely on a custom URI scheme redirection. And a custom URI scheme redirect on iOS 10.3 now means an alert. Apple even does it this way itself: Just try visiting https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/airbnb/id401626263 on an iOS 10.3 device, and you’ll run straight into the new confirmation dialog.
Here’s the situation. When a user clicks any link that leads to the App Store, iOS 10.3 will display a modal asking the user whether they’d like to go there. We’ve tested Apple’s appsto.re short links, full App Store long links, links from attribution providers and deep-linking platforms, and our own Branch-hosted deep links. There is no way around this new alert.
Why is this bad? There are actually two problems:
It’s an extra step. Users don’t like extra steps, especially because downloading a new app is already relatively high-friction. Adding another tap certainly doesn’t help.
Users can press “Cancel.” This is the much bigger problem. Pressing “Cancel” can leave users trapped on an empty page in Safari. Even worse, if they’ve come from another app and then go back to click the same link again, it’ll show this error message and do nothing:If you ever lost or accidentally deleted data from your iOS device, you can use the professional Gihosoft iPhone Data Recovery software to retrieve important data from iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch even without backup.
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You can’t avoid the alert. And the reality is that some users will click “Cancel,” either on purpose or by mistake. What you can do is give more context, to help visitors complete their journey if they fall off in the middle. I’m calling this a “second chance” screen, and it looks like this:
Yes, the new iOS 10.3 confirmation dialog is still there. But now we also have a friendly URL in Safari’s address bar, the app logo and name in the background, and a button that users can click to try again:
At Branch, we pushed the first version of this second-chance screen live for all apps on the Branch platform within hours of discovering this new edge case in iOS 10.3. It has since become a widely adopted solution; here are just a few examples we have seen pop up in the last few weeks from various services:
Making the best of a bad situation, some apps have built custom second-chance screens:
All of these screens are solving the same basic problem: give visitors an escape hatch if they accidentally hit that “Cancel” button. It is still less than ideal, but the result works:
Here is the default template we use on the current second-chance screen for all of the apps on Branch’s platform:
The key part of this is the JavaScript snippet at the end:
<script type="text/javascript">
window.onload =function(){
window.location ="<% iTunes Store URL %>";};</script>
The logic works like this:
When the page loads, attempt to forward to the App Store. (JavaScript redirections like this are fully supported by Google and have no adverse effect on SEO.)
The redirection presents the confirmation dialog to the user.
If the user taps “Open,” all is good.
If the user taps “Cancel,” the rest of the template will have rendered in the background.
The user has unlimited opportunities to tap your download button. This displays the confirmation dialog again, but hopefully the user is now ready to continue.
However, I wouldn’t personally recommend building this solution yourself; you have better things to do than to constantly fix new edge cases like these from Apple, Google, Facebook, etc. If you’re using a hosted deep-link provider such as Branch or Firebase (with its Dynamic Links), then this edge case is already being handled for you. Attribution tools such as Adjust and AppsFlyer have also built similar workarounds for their paid tracking links.
We wanted to know how much this new confirmation alert actually affects download conversion rates. The Branch platform has millions of link clicks per day, across almost 25,000 apps, so we took a sample of this data from 2 May 2017. Here is what we found:
Safari does not allow clicks on this new “Cancel” button to be tracked directly. However, Branch can infer the number based on changes to other metrics that we measure, further down the funnel. In our sample, almost 19% of users were clicking it.
Installations Recaptured By Second-Chance Screen Link
The good news is that visitors still want your app — they are just getting confused by this new warning. When we give them another opportunity to click by showing a content preview with a download button, over 5% of our sample continued to install successfully.
Here is the bottom line: This new confirmation dialog is enough of a roadblock that almost a fifth of iOS users press the “Cancel” button. Even with a workaround enabled, the iOS 10.3 installation rate in our sample was about 2.25% lower than on iOS 10.2. Data shows that a second-chance screen helps, but some users still fail to make it all the way through to download.
From a more technical perspective, serving up a screen like this requires returning an HTTP 200 response, serving a page of content and waiting for the client to execute Javascript. The costs of adding just 100 milliseconds in latency are well known, and sophisticated deep-linking implementations have long since moved to the far more efficient 307 redirection to reduce this redirection delay. Apple’s new iOS 10.3 behavior has broken this option, forcing the ecosystem to fall back on a slower, outdated solution.
Patching the original ransomware-esque custom URI exploit was the right thing for Apple to do, but the App Store is unlike any other platform. It is a core part of the iOS infrastructure. Applying such a flawed UX to a critical platform component is a costly decision.
With the early iOS 11 betas showing no change to this behavior, it seems possible we are stuck with a confirmation alert for the long haul. This makes it even more critical for you to offer your app’s users a fallback option. In the competitive mobile app world, having such an easy way to increase your installations is unheard of and is absolutely worth the small amount of effort it takes.