If you went ahead an installed 1.1.1 only to end up with a Jonathan Ive-designed paperweight at the end of it, you’ve got a couple of choices: go to your nearest Apple store, tail between your legs, and hope they take pity on you and fix your iPhone somehow, or turn to your friendly neighbourhood hack-community and see what functionality they can restore. Over at the Apple-Touch forums we’re pointed in the direction of some instructions that promise at least a partial restore; in this case, use of all but the GSM functionality unless you’re using the original AT&T SIM.

So, if you can make do with WiFi connectivity, this might just be your salvation; basically it downgrades all but the baseband to firmware version 1.0.2 – not perfect but we’re told that the team are still beavering away. Full instructions after the cut…
**Make sure you have a copy of the 1.0.2 firmware stored in:
youruser/library/iTunes/iPhone Software Updates
**Reboot iPhone holding the top button (power) and the home buttons.
**Release the top button 10 seconds after that, right after the screen goes dark.
**The iPhone screen will appear to be off. Now start iTunes manually anyway.
**iTunes will tell you it has found an iPhone in “restore mode.”
**Press option key and then click the restore button.
**Select the 1.0.2 firmware .ipsw file from here:
youruser/library/iTunes/iPhone Software Updates
**The phone will restart and there will be an error out at the end. Don’t worry. It was bound to happen.
**Shutdown iTunes.
**Launch the latest iNDpendence (Mac-only for now.)
**Jailbreak the phone using a expanded 1.0.2 file (to do that, make a copy of the 1.0.2 ipsw file, then select “Open with…” from the Finder’s action menu and use BOMArchiveHelper.app (it will appear in the menu.) The ipsw are really .zip files.
**It will flash all sorts of errors, but don’t worry.
**Activate the phone.
**It will show the SIM error but now the iPhone will work again with your Wi-Fi and your apps.







It blows me away that hacking is such frontpage news in this day and age. In my opinion, we need FAR FAR more warnings, and far fewer up-to-the-minute updates on very weakly tested solutions. Some people will try anything and feel sorry later.
This method has been proven successful many, many times now. Read some of the other M