Bricked my iPhone

I installed some early beta software on my iPhone a few days ago, and apparently something went terribly wrong because I couldn’t use Installer.app after that. No problem, I’ll just restore to 1.1.4 and use ZiPhone to jailbreak it, right? Wrong.

After restoring the phone to 1.1.4 I ran ZiPhone, things went normally until it reached the “Installing base apps…” screen, where it decided to lockup. I killed the ZiPhone process and restarted the iPhone, it booted right back to the ZiPhone install screen again, and again, and again.

Next I tried booting into DFU mode. If you’re unfamiliar with DFU mode, you enter it by pressing and holding the home and the power button simultaneously, once the phone turns off, continue to hold the home button while turning the phone back on. It’s important that your iPhone is connected to your computer with iTunes running for this to work.

DFU mode led to moderate success, iTunes recognized it and allowed me to restore the firmware to 1.1.4. However when it restarted it now only displays a black screen with one white block in the upper left-hand corner.

My plan right now is to try restoring it to an older firmware and seeing if that yields any result.

Posted in 1.1.4, Aaron Nelsen, Installer.app, ZiPhone at May 5th, 2008. 4 Comments.

Troubleshooting iPhone Reception Problems

When I first started using my iPhone I was having some major problems with getting consistent cell reception, I ended up having to send it back to Apple for repairs, but there are a few things you can try before that.

Reset Network Settings: Go to Settings -> General -> Reset -> Reset Network Settings (Confirm prompts to reset).
Turn Airplane Mode on and then off: Settings -> Turn Airplane Mode on -> Turn Airplane Mode off.
Restoring the iPhone: Open iTunes with your iPhone connected and hit Restore (mainly if you’re having problems with a jailbroken iPhone).
Eject your SIM card: Eject the SIM card using a paperclip and then reinsert the card (the idea is that the card isn’t making proper contact).
Add some tape:
Eject your SIM card and remove it from the tray, next add a small piece of scotch tape to the tray (under where you place the SIM card), reinsert the SIM card in the tray and load it into the phone. Again, the idea is this forces it to make a better connection.
Swap your SIM card:
You might just have a bad SIM card, swing by AT&T and have them swap it out for a new one.

And if all that fails, it’s time for a call to Apple iPhone Support @ 1-800-MY-IPHONE (1-800-694-7466).