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Download the latest beta firmware for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Vision Pro, and Apple TV. Check the signing status of the beta firmware.

How to Install?

You might find installing IPSW files onto your device challenging without guidance. Follow the installation steps below, and you'll be able to do it yourself.

Step 1

Backup your data

Make sure you have backed up your device using iCloud or iTunes on your PC or Mac. Otherwise, you may lose your data.

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Step 2

Connect your device

You can connect your device using a Lightning or USB-C cable to your PC or Mac.

Click to view details
Step 3

Install .ipsw file

In iTunes or Finder (Mac), hold down the Shift key (or the Options key on a Mac) and click on "Check for Update" button.

Click to view details
Step 4

Restore your backup

After iTunes has installed the .ipsw file on your device, follow the on-screen instructions to restore your data.

Click to view details

Need more help?
Read A Step-by-Step Guide

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Then the world outside got louder.

But she also learned joy. Real, reckless, unholy joy. She learned it in the back of a drag show at 2 a.m., when a dozen trans women crowded into a single bathroom to fix each other’s wigs and laugh until they cried. She learned it in the way Mara held her hand during her first panic attack, whispering, “You’re real. You’re here. You belong.” She learned it in the quiet miracle of looking in the mirror one morning and not seeing a stranger.

“You ain't broken, baby,” Gloria said, wiping down the counter. “You're just not assembled yet.”

Her mother was in a hospice bed, thin as a whisper. For a long moment, neither spoke. Then her mother reached out a trembling hand and touched Sasha’s face, tracing the jawline that had softened with hormones, the eyes that had learned to hold light.

Then the world outside got louder.

But she also learned joy. Real, reckless, unholy joy. She learned it in the back of a drag show at 2 a.m., when a dozen trans women crowded into a single bathroom to fix each other’s wigs and laugh until they cried. She learned it in the way Mara held her hand during her first panic attack, whispering, “You’re real. You’re here. You belong.” She learned it in the quiet miracle of looking in the mirror one morning and not seeing a stranger.

“You ain't broken, baby,” Gloria said, wiping down the counter. “You're just not assembled yet.”

Her mother was in a hospice bed, thin as a whisper. For a long moment, neither spoke. Then her mother reached out a trembling hand and touched Sasha’s face, tracing the jawline that had softened with hormones, the eyes that had learned to hold light.