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I can say that since 2007, all kinds of iPhones in all their versions (except for the new 5C and 5S) and iPads have passed through my hands, which is why what's happening to me is a bit disconcerting.
A colleague has an iPad 2 that her 8-year-old daughter uses. She has set a restriction code that she doesn't remember coinciding with updating it via OTA to iOS 7.0.2 and, among other things, has restricted Safari, so she can't even browse.
I'm trying to restore it, and I say trying because I've restored the iOS 7.0.2 as I've done no less than 100 times and when it's finished and the iPad restarts, it turns out that absolutely nothing has been erased from the content, it still has its applications, its photos, its data and its security codes. It's already on the fourth restoration and all with the same success, none.Any suggestions?
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I haven't used IOS in a long time, but it might have something to do with the fact that my appstore account is linked and it makes a backup in the cloud or something, is that why it doesn't get deleted? I'm just asking out of ignorance, because it never happened to me when I had IOS.
regards
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That's what I thought the first time, but after deleting the iCloud account and considering that it has no internet connection, it would be quite an achievement for it to manage on its own xD -
well, there's no such thing as 5 bad or anything like that, as the saying goes, right?
In the end, instead of downloading the.ipsw and 'updating' it myself, I let itunes download it by restoring and it seems to have done it right. I'm currently installing the apps that were installed. -
It happened to me the other way around with an update that got stuck in the middle.
iTunes couldn't download the.ipsw correctly and crashed the process.
In the end I downloaded it first and put it into iTunes from the disk and it worked.Strange things that happen.