The neon hum of the server room was the only soundtrack to Leo’s late-night obsession. On his workbench sat a pristine, silver iPad Mini 2—a "brick" he’d rescued from a junk bin. It was locked tight, frozen on an iCloud activation screen that refused to budge. To most, it was e-waste. To Leo, it was a puzzle.
Access the internal system files without the phone actually "booting" into the locked iOS. Mount the data partition. Delete or rename Dk Ramdisk Bypass Icloud IOS 9.3.5-10.3.3
(like iPad 2, iPad 3, iPhone 4s, and iPhone 5) and some early 64-bit devices (A7–A10 chips). The "Ramdisk" Concept The neon hum of the server room was
Primarily 32-bit Apple devices including iPhone 4s, iPhone 5, iPhone 5c, iPad 2, iPad 3, iPad 4, and iPad Mini 1. To most, it was e-waste
: Most ramdisk bypasses for these versions do not support cellular calls or SMS.
The device will restart and should boot directly to the Home screen, skipping the activation process. Limitations of the Bypass
However, the checkm8 exploit ensures that the Dk Ramdisk method will work forever. There is no software update that Apple can push to these devices to stop the Ramdisk boot, because the flaw exists in the read-only bootrom.