![]() Lots of other stuff is in there (like Books and Podcasts) but to view photos you’ll have to open DCIM, then 100APPLE. You can find photos into the Media folder. Anyway, choose to remember the connection and here you go: you’re now browsing your iPad file system. Now click on it and the Finder will ask you a username and password to access the device: the default ones are “root” and “alpine”, but you can read this tutorial here on how to change the password. This is the kind of Netatalk magic we were talking about before. Make sure that both the devices (iPad and Mac) and using the same local network. Now take a look at your Finder sidebar, ‘cause a nice iPad icon should be there under the “Shared” tab. To get Netatalk to work you’ll have to reboot though, and if you’re using SBSettings (also from Cydia, a must have tool) tap on Power, then Reboot and wait for the iPad to restart. ![]() If you still have to jailbreak your iPad and get going with Cydia, you can read our post here. Once you’ve installed Netatalk, the iPad will respring. And luckily for us, an iPad: Netatalk is compatible with iPhone OS 3.2, so feel free to fire up Cydia and install it. Netatalk is a free and open source implementation of Apple Talk for Unix devices which, basically, lets you use Apple’s standard file sharing between a Mac and an iPhone, in the Finder.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |