iOS 6 it has been available for more than 3 weeks for iDevice owners, a good part of them have already updated, iPhone owners have rushed to install it and probably many of you are wondering how to decode your own terminal on this version of the operating system. Well, in this article I will explain, I will divide the article into 2 segments: one for those who have the iOS 6 baseband and want to unlock, the other for those who already have decodable basebands and want to update it to iOS 6.
iOS 6 – basebands 01.00.16, 3.0.04, 04.12.02 and 05.16.07.
- iPhone 5 - just permanent decoding;
- Iphone 4s - permanent decoding si Gevey AIO;
- iPhone 4 – only permanent decoding;
- iPhone 3GS - permanent decoding, update to the baseband 06.15.00 of the iPad (which can be done with any version of redsn0w) and SAM for any baseband if you saved the decoding. Possibly you can do it too downgrade to a baseband on which you can use the GPS.
The old basebands – iOS 4 and iOS 5
- Iphone 4s - Gevey Ultra S si permanent decoding;
- iPhone 4 – ultrasn0w for baseband 01.59.00, Gevey for maximum baseband 04.10.xx, SAM for any baseband if you saved the decoding and permanent decoding for any baseband;
- iPhone 3GS - permanent decoding, update to the baseband 06.15.00 of the iPad (which can be done with any version of redsn0w) and SAM for any baseband if you saved the decoding. Possibly you can do it too downgrade to a baseband on which you can use the GPS.
- iPhone 3G – ultrasn0w decodes the baseband 06.15.00 which you can also downgrade. There is an alternative permanent decoding si the one through SAM.
Some users say that SAM is compatible with iOS 6, I haven't checked this, I can't confirm/deny the information, but I recommend you not to update for now and to wait until the program is updated. If you have an iPhone 4 and want to install iOS 6 while keeping your baseband intact, redsn0w should theoretically help you, but I don't recommend trying the procedure for now because you might update the baseband.