Unlocking iPhone 3Gs--the Vietnamese way | Crave
| BLOG.MACMAGAZINE found this 11/29/2008 on news.cnet.com (flag) |
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Vietnamita desbloqueia iPhones 3G via hardware
Published 11/29/2008 by Rafael Fischmann at BLOG.MACMAGAZINE
... Em uma viagem à sua terra natal, Dong Ngo, editor da CNET, encontrou uma loja de telefones que se tornou bastante popular no Vietnã por desbloquear iPhones 3G. O mais impressionante é que o processo não é feito nem via substituição do SIM (que pode causar problemas de compatibilidade com o iTunes) e nem muito menos via hack de software, ...
Unlocking an iPhone 3G the Vietnamese way
Published 12/1/2008 by John Brownlee at Boing Boing Gadgets
... used a chip reader to read information into a file. He then used a Hex editor to remove the locking data from the file, and after that, the chip got reprogrammed with the newly altered file. Now it was no longer programmed to work with only a specific provider.
The chip then got reassembled into the motherboard, another painstaking process.
As a last step, the technician put the phone back together, and it looked like nothing had been done to it.
Unlocking iPhone 3Gs -- the Vietnamese way [Crave]
Vietnamese iPhone Unlock Isn't for the Faint of Heart [IPhone]
Published 12/1/2008 by Adam Frucci at Gizmodo
... All this for a mere $80! Call me crazy, but watching someone do this to my phone would be infinitely more satisfying than simply downloading a program to crack it. You'd feel like your phone really earned its unlocking. [Crave via ...
Unlocking the iPhone 2.2, Vietnamese-Style
Published 12/2/2008 at Ubergizmo
... A Small shop in Vietnam has an risky approach to unlock the phone: remove the chip and and change the locking setting by reading the chip data to a computer, changing the unlock data and rewriting the modified data to the phone... and re-assembling the phone like it never was taken apart. It's risky for the phone, but it's even riskier for the shop owner Tuan An: if he fails, he promise to give a new phone to the owner. So far, he fried only two iPhones while testing his method. (via CNET) ...
