Error 1013 Iphone 4 Itunes
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Guide Mac Mac Mac Apps Mac Tips TV Apple TV guide Apps iOS Apps Mac Apps Widgets Best Apps App Finder Tips Tips How to Tutorial iPhone Photography Download Deals Daily Deals: 15% off iTunes gift cards, $180 off 9.7-inch iPad Pro,... Let's Talk Jailbreak 154: The natural evolution of things Let's Talk iOS 155: Hiding the love The top stories of the week on iDB skip to main content skip to main menu Fix iPhone Error 1013 By Sébastien Page, Mar 12, 2011 Tweet 129 Comments Yesterday Tina decided it was time to update her iPhone firmware. It was probably the first software update she did since she got her iPhone 4, months ago. Because she doesn't https://discussions.apple.com/thread/2657207?tstart=0 need or even care about a jailbreak, her iPhone is clean. No jailbreak. I was watching South Park when I heard her voice from upstairs: "honey, I have a problem, it's saying something about error 1013". Damn you, iPhone, for disturbing me while watching disturbing TV shows! I had had this error 1013 before so I was confident it would be a one-minute fix… As expected, iTunes was throwing the following error message: The iPhone "Tina's iPhone" could not be http://www.idownloadblog.com/2011/03/12/fix-iphone-error-1013/ updated. An unknown error occurred (1013). Just to make sure, I go through the restore process one more time, which takes 5-10 minutes and end up with the same error message. Next step was downloading iReb, which didn't do anything. Next step was downloading TinyUmbrealla, which didn't do anything either. Without anymore ideas, I decided to Google the error, which took me to this thread on Apple's forums. After following the simple instructions detailed below, I was able to finally restore Tina's iPhone. On Mac: Open Finder Hold down COMMAND + SHIFT keys and press ‘G' Enter "/private/etc/" in the field and press "Go" Find "hosts" file in the directory Drag the file to your desktop Open it in a text editor Remove the line that has gs.apple.com entirely or put a # at the beginning of it to comment it out Save the file Drag it back to the /private/etc/ folder. On Windows: Locate the hosts file in one of the following directories: Windows 95/98/Me c:\windows\hosts Windows NT/2000/XP Pro c:\winnt\system32\drivers\etc\hosts Windows XP, Vista, 7 c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts Right click and click on "Open With…" and then click on "Notepad" on the list. Remove the line that has gs.apple.com completely and save the file. This whole operation took me a good 30 minutes, but most importantly, I missed one of my favorite South Park episodes, the one with the Dog Whisperer. But, the best part of it was
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on: Tuesday, 8 February 2011 By: Rob (James Robinson) 72 Comments Photo credit: hirotomo (Flickr) Having recently updated my iPhone 4 to iOS 4.2.1 I can report that it wasn't without pain. For a period of time I found myself stuck on the recovery screen because iTunes couldn't verify my iPhone with Apple's servers. For reasons known only to Apple, when you restore your iDevice, iTunes will "prepare" your iPhone for restore i.e. place it in a unusable state before then verifying with Apple that it's cool to upgrade before then proceeding to load new firmware. [C'mon, seriously Apple? - do that before you put my device into recovery mode please!] Each and every time I attempted to restore my iPhone I ended up with "The iPhone could not be restored. An unknown error occurred (1013)". This was down to a pesky entry in my hostfile that needed eradicating. If you're in the same boat then here's the fix I found when doing a little Googling: Mac OS X 1. On your Mac, open your Applications folder. 2. Navigate to the Utilities folder. 3. Open Terminal. 4. Type "sudo nano /etc/hosts" (without quotes) and press enter. 5. Enter your password 6. Use the down arrow key to find the gs.apple.com entries. Once the cursor is in front, make sure you comment out the line(s) by entering # in front of the text. 7. Save the file by pressing CONTROL+O. 8. Exit the nano editor by pressing CONTROL+X. 9. Restore your iDevice. Windows 1. Press Start, then Programs, then Accessories 2. Launch Notepad or WordPad 3. Click Open from File menu. 4. Browse to Windows/System32/drivers/etc 5. In "files of type:" select all documents 6. Open "hosts" 7. Delete all line that have gs.apple.com or similar 8. Hit Save 9. Restore your device Sources: @Gustasn0w for Windows steps & Tech-Exclusive for Mac steps UPDATE: Important notes if you are getting the error when installing an older firmware There are some occasions where you want to install an older firmware and do so using a tool like TinyUmbrella to give access to those SHSH blogs you've got saved (since Apple doesn't sign old firmware). If you get error 1013 when updating with TinyUmbrella running, do the following: - let the iPhone boot to the iTunes recovery screen - stop your TSS server from running in TinyUmbrella - click "Exit Recovery" in TinyUmbrella - iPhone will now boot as normal and you can jailbreak as you would before This basically happens because the baseband is being preserved. Share this:Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new