I have a destroyed iPhone 6 plus. Is their any way to remove the hard drive or, should really say flash drive and put it in a working iPhone. I have a lot of info that might be lost forever. Is it possible anyone apple store or third party could do this? Thanks!

There is no hard drive in an iPhone. It's all solid state memory, and it is encrypted. All of your information is lost forever if you didn't use any of the half dozen different ways that Apple provides for backing up all Apple products. You might try contacting Drive Savers ( =iphone), but I suspect they will tell you what I just posted. It's your best chance, but it will not be inexpensive.


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There is no hard drive in an iPhone. It's all solid state memory, and it is encrypted. All of your information is lost forever if you didn't use any of the half dozen different ways that Apple provides for backing up all Apple products. You might try contacting Drive Savers (****), but I suspect they will tell you what I just posted. It's your best chance, but it will not be inexpensive.

There is no hard drive in an iPhone. Just SSD memory, which is permanently affixed to the logic board. If the board isn't damaged an independent shop may be about to put it in a new enclosure. If you had important information on the phone presumably you backed it up regularly to either iCloud or to iTunes on your computer; ideally, you set up automatic daily backup as you were prompted to do when you first activated the phone. You can then restore the backup to a replacement phone.

not sure if you got it fix yet but what you said and the look of your iphone you need a new whole screen assembly including the home button and to get your data back you need a working screen for sure to enter your passcode and backup your phone. I suggest trying going apple Genius Bar get a screen replacement if you got warranty or try a 3rd party that can put a screen so you can remove the passcode and backup it up For now

not sure if you got it fix yet but what you said and the look of your iphone you need a new whole screen assembly including the home button and to get your data back you need a working screen for sure to enter your passcode and backup your phone. I suggest trying going apple Genius Bar get a screen replacement if you got warranty or try a 3rd party that can put a screen so you can remove the passcode and backup it up For now

When I press that button, it takes me to the iCloud panel in Settings. In that panel is a switch to turn on iCloud drive. When I flip the switch on and it turns green, it opens up a screen that says "Upgrade to iCloud Drive."

well, I have the exact issue and unfortunately hard reset is not an option since I migrated from Android to it just a month ago and had restored my backup in this (which is not yet backed up to my iCloud drive). I will loose all my data and chats that are critical.

I want to view files on my USB stick which are larger than 4GB so the USB stick is NTFS form. When I connect and look at the drive in my files app it says it's "read-only", so I couldn't view the files. I read elsewhere that this is because the drive needs to be in FAT32 form. But I cannot load the files onto the drive if it is in FAT32 because it doesn't allow anything larger than 4GBs.

iphone 15 pro max 512GB does not recognize my external SSD by Seagate Firecuda 2TB. The drive has a usb C connector. It works fine with the ipad mini and my macbook air. The disk is formated to Exfat using mac os 14.0.

I am having the same issue... kind of. It worked the first time, and I even shot some video. I connected that drive to my MacStudio, and accessed it fine. Next time I plugged it into the iPhone, it didn't show up. I shut down and restarted the phone and it worked again. BUT, once I unplugged it and then re-plugged it in, it didn't work again.

If your external drive is not recognized by your iPhone 15, first ensure you are following these steps from Charge and connect with the USB-C connector on your iPhone 15 (that you've already looked over)

I thought so too, but mine does still throw an error even after entering the password in the Files app. Crucial X10 1TB. It's partitioned into two drives, both on AFPS Encrypted. Tried multiple cables, none work. Files opens the drive though. I think there might be the same verification process that has to be done on the Camera app as well. Maybe those two apps (despite being native) don't talk to each other.

My question is, does anyone know if the iPhone hard drive is encrypted? Let's say the phone never made it to a connection and therefore didn't receive the command for a swipe. Could a thief plug in the iphone and access the data on it, or extract the hard drive and get access to it? Or is the data on the iphone encrypted?

First, there's no hard drive on any iOS device...it's flash storage. Second, iPhone supports hardware encryption, but you must set and use a passcode to insure your data can't be accessed. If you used a passcode, unless someone can guess your passcode, your data is safe.

I have almost no files inside the iCloud Drive (maximum 200MB of files) and when I enter the iPhone Storage, the iCloud Drive takes up 9.56GB and contains the following message: "your most recently accessed files are downloaded to this device icloud drive ".

Last I knew, you do not need to eject a USB Drive from an iOS or iPadOS device. As long as you're not actively in the process of copying files to and from the drive, you should be able to remove it safely.

Access all your Box files directly from your desktop, without taking up much hard drive space. Box Drive is natively integrated into Mac Finder and Windows Explorer, making it easy to share and collaborate on files.

Edit to expand: If I understand you correctly you are wanting to map a drive to an iPhone so that it is recognised as say S:\Marketing. This is because you want links to Windows file sharing in emails to work properly. This is how I understand it. iOS has a unix-like operating system. The same reason you can't mount windows shares with drive letters on Linux machines is the same reason you can't do this on an iPhone. The filesystems work differently.

This refers to getting Windows to assign the phone a drive letter (like external storage) when the phone is connected via USB. This isn't what the OP is looking for if I've understood the post correctly.

There are plenty of well-known and hidden features in Apple iOS and iPadOS. One of the hidden features is the ability for users to plug in an external USB drive and access documents directly within the Files app of iPhone and iPad devices running iOS 13 and later. The benefit of doing this, especially on the iPad Pro, is enormous, as it adds virtually unlimited storage capacity for things such as photos, videos, emails, documents and spreadsheets, games and other personalised applications.

On a Lightning device, simply plug in the adapter, then plug both the IronKey IKKP200 and the power cord from the adapter into the wall. (It is important to note that the USB-A interface draws more power than the Lightning connector delivers, so be sure that enough power is being supplied.) Then, simply key in the PIN to unlock the data files on the drive, and voila! Protected files are now accessible.

I wanted to upload a video on google drive but it is not uploading the video properly and it is showing me error as "video is still processing try again in a few minutes". it caused frustration and wasted my time as I needed to share the video urgently. The delay in processing the video prevented me from completing my task on time. Secondly, as I was sharing the video with others, they were unable to view it until it was fully processed, which caused delays in our collaborative projects. I tried following the solutions i found on the internet but i am still facing the same issue.

The T-Mobile Network Test Drive app was an iOS only based app that gave potential customers using a compatible unlocked iPhone the option to test our amazing network before joining. iOS users who still want to test drive our network prior to switching should check out Network Pass instead.

I attempted to reinstall the iphone sdk on my mac. I figured the reinstallation would just override my previous installation but it seems that more hard drive space was eaten up after the second install. Does anyone know how I can refresh my installation and start from scratch to free up all the lost space?

As its name implies, the Wi-Drive is equipped with 802.11g/n wireless technology, which is used by your iOS device to connect to the drive. Kingston says the drive has a 30-foot range; I had no problems connecting and streaming videos from within 30 feet. I also had no problems from as far as 50 feet, as well as when the Wi-Drive and my iPad were in different rooms.

If you have a set of photos on the drive, the Wi-Drive app displays a set of thumbnails, and you can tap each thumbnail to see a larger image. The Wi-Drive app has a helpful slideshow feature with five different transitions you can use.

Once the backup process is finished, your files will appear on your external drive, bypassing your Mac. So if you were wondering how can you backup iPhone directly to external hard drive, AnyTrans is the perfect tool for you.

That definitely means that an iPhone 15 Pro, or iPhone 15 Pro Max user who is shooting video, can do so without worrying about running out of space during a shot. The iPhone can remain set up, ready to shoot, while a second or subsequent drive is attached.

"iPhone 15 Pro will enable great workflows for photographers and filmmakers that previously weren't possible," said Greg Joswiak, Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing. "iPhone 15 Pro also supports recording Pro Res video directly to an external storage drive. video productions can quickly swap drives and keep iPhone as the main camera on set." e24fc04721

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