Feel free to PM the solution to all of us.InfiniteNine said:Well they have but it's not public.
Feel free to PM the solution to all of us.InfiniteNine said:Well they have but it's not public.
I think it's more like this.3rdman said:Feel free to PM the solution to all of us.
<+Mathieulh> the patch from hermes was easy to do (and cheap) to be honest
<+Mathieulh> besides it's easier to just add a syscall that'll patch the bd auth to always return true
<+Mathieulh> I could do it if I ever cared about backups xD
<+Mathieulh> I could even patch the psn version check if I cared
<+Mathieulh> neither of this is hard by any mean
<+Mathieulh> I just rather see hacked consoles out of SCE servers if I can help it
<+Mathieulh> too many people would cheat and ruin online gaming
<+Mathieulh> if people didn't abuse we'd already have released a psgroove with a psn patch
ssowinski said:Yabut, even if I update to 3.50 and go legit from now on they could still detect and ban me with it.
Yeah, I don't think I'd release information on something like that either. :lol I can see it getting patched up the moment someone decides to blab it to the world.brotkasten said:I think it's more like this.
Zombie James said:Any update to the Netflix situation?
If you read the comments someone explains how to get it to run.Machado said:it says it won't boot at all
shuffle2 said:Sorry about that, I didn't realize github's gist would try to display the entire binary. Here's a proper repo instead: http://github.com/shuffle2/rockbox_psgroove
ssowinski said:BlackBox FTP users might find this useful.
http://www.redmondpie.com/access-ftp-sites-natively-in-windows-7/
Windows access to their PS3 when running an FTP client on it. Simple point and click.
Fuck-awesomemarcan42 said:I can TFTP-load a kernel now, though it doesn't exactly boot yet. More tomorrow, hopefully.
BMF said:Fuck-awesome
Basically, you'd configure your jailbreak device with network settings, the IP of a TFTP server, and a filename. You'd boot your PS3 with the jailbreak device, it would connect to your local PC, download the kernel, and then boot it. You don't need to update your jailbreak device after this. You just update the file on your PC.LovingSteam said:Sorry for my ignorance but I honestly don't understand half of what Marcan says and its significance for little ole' me. Perhaps you wouldn't mind explaining?
Machado said:what is this good for?
I'm sorry for such a moronic question
When updated kernels come out, you won't have to reflash your jailbreak device or alternatively a USB stick with a kernel on it.Machado said:what is this good for?
I'm sorry for such a moronic question
Hassle free updating I think?LovingSteam said:Seems that you and I are the idiots of this thread because I don't see what is so good about this either lol. Unless it means that the jailbreak is upgradeable, aka, get around Sony required updates?
BMF said:When updated kernels come out, you won't have to reflash your jailbreak device or alternatively a USB stick with a kernel on it.
Well, you need it for the start of the boot process. Teetris said it better. Hassle-free updating.LovingSteam said:Does this mean you no longer have to have your USB device continually connected when using the jailbreak? If so, then yes, that is awesome.
Tears For Fears said:Couldn't wait for a psp port any longer, just ordered my AVR. The Saturn and Dreamcast sealed the deal.
PSGroove has never required the dongle be present at all times, it only requires it at bootLovingSteam said:Does this mean you no longer have to have your USB device continually connected when using the jailbreak? If so, then yes, that is awesome.
Killthee said:PSGroove has never required the dongle be present at all times, it only requires it at boot
The original PSJailbreak had the dongle requirement in its payload to force people who wanted to use the dongle on multiple systems at the same time to buy two dongles. The PSGroove team realized it was only necessary to have the dongle connected at boot so they removed the system panic the PSJailbreak team put in when the system realized the dongle was missing.
My understanding of what marcan is trying to do is he's gonna replace the PSJailbreak payload with his own payload that will be able to launch directly into Linux from either a USB or networked drive. His latest tweet is stating he can now load a Linux kernel from a networked drive using his payload, but he's not able to boot it just yet. What this means is eventually we'll be able to use his payload on a dongle connected to a PS3 to boot into a Linux kernel stored on a PC that's on the same network. You won't need to use a USB drive to boot into Linux and whenever you want to update the kernel you can do it easily on your PC by overwriting the current kernel on it.
user friendly said:
user friendly said:
jediyoshi said:Their site menu is one of the most shameless web design rips I've seen in a while.
I may be wrong but I think you would need a separate bootloader with some kind of reflashing/recovery ability. I believe a bootloader is in the works to bring back other os support, so I'm sure something would be built in for that.LovingSteam said:Can the PSgroove also undo a brick caused by saying messing up the flash? If the hack puts the PS3 in a debug mode, shouldn't it be possible?
Clevinger said:What's it a rip of?
PSGroove.com said:A new PSJailbreak clone arrives to the scene, named the P3Hub. This time with a built in USB Hub built into it. No longer will your jailbreak take up one of your usb ports. The other jailbreak mods require you to remove your usb devices to preform the exploit, however the P3hub solves that problem. You can now leave your external hard drive plugged right into the P3Hub and never have to unhook anything again. The P3Hub is also upgradeable/programmable for future payload updates. Its available for purchase now and is $59.99. If youre looking to buy a usb hub already or if youre tired of unhooking your usb accessories every jailbreak, its a good solution to look into.
logical. I like it.LovingSteam said:New contestant makes its way
Mr_Brit said:How long after the PSP was hacked did it take for a CFW to come out? As long as this thing requires a device to be plugged in and a convoluted startup method and being forced to use an out of date firmware in dev mode then this thing will never pick up with general PS3 users ad if that doesn't happen then the scene will not grow in size and it might stagnate and never realise its true potential.
Mr_Brit said:How long after the PSP was hacked did it take for a CFW to come out? As long as this thing requires a device to be plugged in and a convoluted startup method and being forced to use an out of date firmware in dev mode then this thing will never pick up with general PS3 users ad if that doesn't happen then the scene will not grow in size and it might stagnate and never realise its true potential.
LovingSteam said:I'm quite impress tbh. I don't know if the PS3 will ever be as successful as the PSP scene but I definitely can see within 6 months having a type of CFW or a way to bypass required updates.
CadetMahoney said:bypassing required updates ftw.
I think anybody who wishes to be serious about using homebrew on PS3 and still play games will require a second PS3 regardless. CFWs will come out, but i highly doubt anybody will be able to keep up with the official updates, especially with all the PSN stuff. CFW will likely allow people to boot without the USB key and make it easier to access programs from different devices/connections. Personally, a CFW that could turn a retail unit into something similar to a debugging station that could access files on a PC would make my day/month/year/infinite.LovingSteam said:I think that will have to happen within the next 6 weeks or else a lot of folks will give up homebrew for GT5.
user friendly said:
EGM92 said:any word on whether theres any hope for those that updated to 3.42?
Mr_Brit said:For those anticipating the return of otherOS what is the point? Since we will most likely get CFW soon enough shouldn't that be a lot more preferable to otherOS? Is there some other reason you guys want it back as I thought when we had it that it was too slow and would still be slow even if uncrippled due to the low amount of RAM.
One question I'd like to ask. RSX will be "visible" but how will it be supported? I don't think we ever had RSX drivers for linux and Nvidia seems to only provide x86/AMD64/x64 compatible binary files.N.A said:This isn't the return of otherOS, it is a linux bootloader with low level access. RSX support is almost certain.
BrainZEROX said:One question I'd like to ask. RSX will be "visible" but how will it be supported? I don't think we ever had RSX drivers for linux and Nvidia seems to only provide x86/AMD64/x64 compatible binary files.
Open source drivers exist? How do they perform?