
idontknow
Also from hackers who can see my personal info.
thanks.
Answer
McaFee and Norton are total garbage just to let you know. For virus removal/protection software, the best payed one is Kaspersky, and the best free one is AVG or Avira. In the event a virus does slip into your system, you should have Malewarebytes, Superantispyware, Spybot Search and Destroy, Emsisoft Emergency kit scanner, Eset online scanner, Smitfraud fix, Kaspersky Tdss killer, and Kaspersky Virus Removal Tool all downloaded onto your system in the event a virus does strike. It would also be helpful to have Ccleaner and Recuva. Ccleaner will keep your computer clean and fast, and Recuva is incase a virus deletes any files before you can remove it. Defragment every 3 months and run dskchk.exe every few months as well. Remember, the moment you feel you have a virus boot into safe mode and try to remove it with these programs. If these can't detect it, you have a serious problem and should consult an expert for help. Another quick tip, right click your taskbar and lock it. Sometimes with ccleaner quick launch disappears. Also, right click the taskbar, choose task manager, go to performance, choose options, and click hide when minimized and minimize it. If the cpu usage is at 100% at any time where you aren't doing something strenuous, you may have a virus on your machine using that cpu for you. Good luck keeping your machine clean.
McaFee and Norton are total garbage just to let you know. For virus removal/protection software, the best payed one is Kaspersky, and the best free one is AVG or Avira. In the event a virus does slip into your system, you should have Malewarebytes, Superantispyware, Spybot Search and Destroy, Emsisoft Emergency kit scanner, Eset online scanner, Smitfraud fix, Kaspersky Tdss killer, and Kaspersky Virus Removal Tool all downloaded onto your system in the event a virus does strike. It would also be helpful to have Ccleaner and Recuva. Ccleaner will keep your computer clean and fast, and Recuva is incase a virus deletes any files before you can remove it. Defragment every 3 months and run dskchk.exe every few months as well. Remember, the moment you feel you have a virus boot into safe mode and try to remove it with these programs. If these can't detect it, you have a serious problem and should consult an expert for help. Another quick tip, right click your taskbar and lock it. Sometimes with ccleaner quick launch disappears. Also, right click the taskbar, choose task manager, go to performance, choose options, and click hide when minimized and minimize it. If the cpu usage is at 100% at any time where you aren't doing something strenuous, you may have a virus on your machine using that cpu for you. Good luck keeping your machine clean.
What is this tether that people talk about when you update your iphone using black ra1n?
I wanna update my 16 gig iPhone 3G to 3.1.2 from 3.0 and my iPhone is jailbroken. I looked at the new jailbreaking tool, black ra1n, and noticed many warnings about it being tethered. I do not understand exactly what tethered means. I think it is when your iphone runs out of battery you have to restart it from the computer. I really don't want this and if this is the case any solutions would be very appreciated. Thanks for the help
Answer
Basically your right. Apple, for obvious reasons, don't want people jail-breaking their products, especially the iPhone. So they have changed a file called 'mobile-substrate' which includes a code allowing your device to connect and not become 'bricked' - inoperable. Whenever power is lost and the device turned back on this file is reset (it is this file that is altered in the jailbreak process) meaning that on a reboot it will effectively become useless until you plug it back into the computer you jailbroke with (must be same computer otherwise data will be lost) and redo the jail-break.
It is a big hassle but currently I believe it is the only way to jailbreak 3.1.2 however this may have changed. Check out http://modmyi.com/ for more info on this. I have an ipod touch which can be updated to 3.1.2 and jailbroken in a different way as they effectively can't really be bricked. However I downgraded back to 3.0 as I was experience battery life issues and it seemed slightly unstable.
In my honest opinion once you've jailbroken it is really hard to upgrade and keep all your original files and it is just a bit of a nuisance - I understand that people like to keep up to date, especially when some apps ask for a certain Software version.
Hope this has cleared things up and you sort your problem.
Kit
Basically your right. Apple, for obvious reasons, don't want people jail-breaking their products, especially the iPhone. So they have changed a file called 'mobile-substrate' which includes a code allowing your device to connect and not become 'bricked' - inoperable. Whenever power is lost and the device turned back on this file is reset (it is this file that is altered in the jailbreak process) meaning that on a reboot it will effectively become useless until you plug it back into the computer you jailbroke with (must be same computer otherwise data will be lost) and redo the jail-break.
It is a big hassle but currently I believe it is the only way to jailbreak 3.1.2 however this may have changed. Check out http://modmyi.com/ for more info on this. I have an ipod touch which can be updated to 3.1.2 and jailbroken in a different way as they effectively can't really be bricked. However I downgraded back to 3.0 as I was experience battery life issues and it seemed slightly unstable.
In my honest opinion once you've jailbroken it is really hard to upgrade and keep all your original files and it is just a bit of a nuisance - I understand that people like to keep up to date, especially when some apps ask for a certain Software version.
Hope this has cleared things up and you sort your problem.
Kit
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