iOS 9.3.5 was released in August 2016, primarily as an emergency patch for a powerful trio of zero-day exploits (Trident). For most users, it was a security update. For jailbreakers, it became the last officially signed version for many 32-bit devices (iPhone 4s, iPad 2, iPad 3) and the final iOS 9 release before iOS 10 dropped support for those older devices.
But here’s the kicker: iOS 9.3.5 had no public jailbreak for over a year – until Phœnix (for 32-bit) and Home Depot (for 64-bit, limited) arrived. That’s where Filza shined. filza file manager ios 935 verified
Connect to network shares:
If you’re using a non-jailbroken sideload: Connect to network shares: If you’re using a
In this context, “verified” typically means one of: “Verified” does not guarantee safety from malware —
“Verified” does not guarantee safety from malware — it only indicates the build is known to run on the target firmware and has been used successfully by others.
Once rebooted with the Cydia icon on your home screen, you are ready for Filza.