betaneptune wrote:
I don't want to make changes that are not tested or supported by Apple. I want them to test and support the changes I want to make!
I hear you can install any version of Android you want on any Android phone -- well, if the phone supports that version, I think. Doesn't seem to be a problem for Google.
I understand that you can't downgrade. I'm not saying Apple doesn't tell you that. I'm just saying I wish you could.
I already tried to reinstall. I connected the iPad to my Mac, and in iTunes clicked "Restore iPad". Somewhere along the way I got "Unknown error 3004." Nice.
Read your post.
Tried it again. This time the $#1t worked! Strangely, I had TV shows unchecked. So it seems to be at least partly my fault. Still, for a company that's sitting on billions of dollars it doesn't even know what to do with (except to pay lawyers and accountants to find ways to reduce their tax liability so as to make even more billions they don't know what to do with), the products really ought to be better than this. (I'll have to see if Safari still keeps crashing periodically, which it didn't do in 7.1.1, and check if I don't have to tap "Recommend" n times just to recommend a comment in a NY Times article. The screen or link even "blinks" and still it doesn't take most of the time.)
BTW, there was a feature of iOS 7 that no reset would fix. When you adjust the volume while watching a video, the stupid speaker-volume icon comes up and blocks your view -- right smack dab in the middle of the picture! I'm watching a show and it blocks a good chunk of the picture! In iOS 6 you also had that, but at least it was a little bit translucent -- but in iOS 7 it is totally opaque, and in both cases it stays up way too long. Now the scroll bar in the dictionary in iBooks has to be hidden. It's not really ugly or distracting, but it's somehow considered too big and ugly to leave unhidden. It was weeks before I discovered I was missing parts of definitions! But the way-bigger-than-needed speaker-volume icon -- _that_ has to block your vision, making you miss part of the video, and somehow it's perfectly fine. Only a downgrade would have fixed that. Astonishingly, after complaining about it in the feedback section, they actually fixed it in 7.1 ⚠ I couldn't frickin' believe it! Instead of the stupid speaker-volume graphic, you now get the top and bottom control "bars." Still not what it should be, but much, much better. With a downgrade I could have fixed it in an hour. (OK, the 7.1 fix was far, far better, to say the least. But I had to wait for it.)
(I don't see why so much has to be hidden. It seems you're expected to waste time (while increasing your chances of developing RSI) looking for things with your fingers or mouse pointer rather than with your eyes. Your eyes are FAR more efficient at scanning. It's still "Let your fingers do the walking." C'mon! We're past that now.)
Oh, when playing music you still get the stupid speaker-volume graphic, but that's not nearly as bad as blocking a video.
Thanks for your help! (^_^)
Apple's not going to test procedures that they already know are invalid procedures. Downgrading the iOS causes problems. Ask anyone that's used an unauthorized method to do so, and odds are they experienced one or more of the problems I described. It would be a waste of time, money and effort for Apple, so don't expect them to do so.
As far as your iTunes error 3004? What research did you do about that? Here, let me: [Resolve iOS update and restore errors - Apple Support]
Related errors: 17, 1004, 1013, 1638, 3014, 3194, 3000, 3002, 3004, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3194, 3200, or "There was a problem downloading the software," or say the "device isn't eligible for the requested build.". These alerts mean that your computer is either having difficulty contacting the Apple update server or communicating with your device.
Check your computer for software or settings that might cause communication issues between your computer and Apple or between your computer and your device.
Also: [Error 3194, Error 17, or "This device isn't eligible for the requested build"]
If iTunes can’t communicate with the update server, you may see one of these messages:
- Error 17
- Error 1639
- Errors 3000-3020
- Error 3194
- Errors 3100-3999
- This device isn't eligible for the requested build
Safari, like any other web browser, can crash because of the communication with the website. Doesn't mean the web browser is at fault. There are two websites that I visit periodically that often cause a glitch with my browsers. But my browsers work just fine on other websites. Basic logic dictates that if the issue only occurs under a specific condition (i.e., when I play one particular video on YouTube, my browser crashes, but every other video on YouTube I try works fine), then the root cause is related to that specific condition. My car shimmies left & right when I drive over one patch of road. My TV has static when I'm tuned to one particular station. It's not the car, it's the section of road. It's not the TV, it's that one channel.
Step away from emotionalism for a moment, look at things in a logical manner, and then address the issues. That's how you troubleshoot technical issues.
Use tools, not tears.