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On 7/18/2012 6:41 PM, Rich Braun wrote: > The iTunes backup model provides only for whole-volume snapshots; you don't > get to restore things piece-meal. And it includes sys-config items that go > way beyond your personal data, in such a way that there is no assurance that a > snapshot can be restored. The iTunes backup model is nearly identical to the Palm Desktop model: everything exists in iTunes. An iPhone is a portable cache of what's in the parent iTunes. Android is little different: it's a portable cache of what's in the Google cloud. Their backup mechanisms are nearly identical: modified user data is copied to the parent at sync time. Their restore mechanisms are nearly identical: wipe the device, restore the base configuration (iTunes for iOS, adding a Google account on Android), then let the sync tool copy everything from the master. The practical difference is that iOS requires iTunes and a USB cord while Android will chew up your air time. If you really want confidence then you don't want a smart phone. You want a Day Planner and a couple of pencils. Day Planners aren't bricked on a whim. As for recovering your data, if you didn't jailbreak the iPhone then do a factory reset on it in iTunes. This should install a clean, stock OS firmware. You may need to put it in DFU mode before connecting the USB cord to do the restore. You should then be able to restore your data in iTunes. If you did jailbreak (I suspect you did because I've seen the same kind of boot loops on my iPod Touch after faulty jailbreak installs) then you'll need to get the latest version of redsn0w and a copy of the correct firmware file for your device. You'll also need to recover your SHSH blobs. redsn0w should be able to do it with DFU mode. Use that plus the firmware file to build a signed firmware file for your device. Put the iPhone into Pwned DFU mode (redsn0w will tell you how) and use redsn0w to install the custom firmware. If all goes well then you should be able to restore your data in iTunes. -- Rich P.
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