Once you have done the update to a particular firmware once, the only thing the discs with the 4.1 or greater update on them are doing is restubbing the IOSes and that's all. Actual new firmware updates are infrequent enough (two or three a year) that it's not much of a problem to reinstall the IOSes afterwards. Once you have run a particular firmware update once, just use StartPatch to block the discs from updating until a new firmware comes out and it has been hacked. Then you can disable the StartPatch block, do the update, reinstall cIOSes, and re-enable the StartPatch block. Doing that once every few months should not be too much of a problem.GrEvilKin said:To update without having to reinstall cIOS249. 4.2 and I assume all future updates are stubbing it.Gvaz said:Either way, I'm not sure why you'd want to use IOS58 since the ones you want (with fast usb 2.0 support, high level access to the hardware, etc) are in IOS 222/223/224 anyways.
There's about nothing that doesn't run if you don't just use a custom 222.
If we were to try out IOS58, it would not be be because of this reason.