![]() No big deal, right? Wrong! The update was delivered via an APK for the patcher and a separate patch. There was a firmware update to the device for any that were ordered between Dec 23 and Jan 10 that fixes a disconnect issue. In Location Services on my phone, I have it set to "Only When Using" for permissions for iToolsBT. This is similar to how I would launch iTools Mobile, it just has the extra steps of connecting to Bluetooth in 2 different ways. Once you have the green Bluetooth symbol on the map screen, you can teleport, or start your GPX route, and then launch Pokemon Go. Then you need to launch the iToolsBT app, and click on the bluetooth icon in the app and choose the iTools BLE device in the list there, to connect that. I found that the way to run it is to turn the device on, go to your Bluetooth settings on your iPhone, look for the iTools MFI device, and connect/pair with that. The installation instructions are kind of poor. ![]() I'm staying on 12 for a good long while, I think. I'm still on iOS 12, but apparently iOS 13 only allows 15km of spoofing distance from your "real" location. Pokemon Go can get a little slow after a while sometimes on my iPhoneX, I'm not sure if it's PoGo itself, or if the companion app is eating resources over time, but I usually just restart PoGo and continue on. Teleporting gives a note of how long to wait, but doesn't have a big timer going on. + The companion app supports teleport, coordinate to coordinate walking, "street" walking (like Google Maps would use to send you from point A to B), GPX, and it can also auto-create a GPX based on the known stops/gyms within a certain distance, which is nice if you just want to run through an area once. The later models of the dongles were pretty flimsy, from what I had read. + Bluetooth means you don't have to have the dongle hanging off of it, and could spoof in plain sight of people. + You can use it with the legit Pokemon Go client. This runs in the background while you run the normal Pokemon Go application. It looks to have the same functionality and design, it just has a button to connect the Bluetooth device. This is what you would use instead of (in my case) iTools Mobile. There is a companion app, iToolsBT, that you'll get an invitation from ThinkSkySoft to use as a "Beta Tester" through Apple's Testflight program. I've had it running for up to 4 hours uninterrupted, so no disconnects on Bluetooth (see below for details on the firmware update) ThinkSkySoft claims 25 hours of time, but I don't know if I'll be up for testing that long. I haven't tested the battery drain on it yet, other than 90 minutes of unplugged time. It's smaller than a credit card, at 2.75in x 1.75in x 0.5in approximately, so it fits nicely in a shirt/coat pocket. ![]() The device took 3 weeks to arrive from Hong Kong, and it comes with a soft carrying case and USB-C charging cable. I'd been looking to order it for a while and it finally was back in stock right around Christmas, so I took a shot and bought one. I'd avoided iSpoofer and other apps like it, mostly because I saw how often the certificates were being revoked, and I also remembered the tedious routine of using Cydia Impactor from back in the ++ days. This made catching manually almost impossible while spoofing. ![]() This device has worked pretty well for over a year, around 15 months now, but the cable has become quite temperamental, disconnecting at a light touch. Next, I started using iTools Go, which was a small device that had pass-through charging, and plugged into the phone. Once again, I stepped back from spoofing for a bit, though that didn't last long. I got a red warning on one of my alt accounts, but not the other or my main. This worked great for a while, until they also were hit with a banwave, possibly due to the GPS coordinates not giving altitude information, or some other reason. I had been using PokeGo++ up until that point, and after that wave, I stopped for a bit until I came across the discussion about iTools Desktop (which was pretty much hooking your phone up to your PC, and letting iTools use Developer Mode to spoof your location). I'll do my best to give as much detail on it as possible, and if anyone has questions, I'll also do my best to answer them.įirst, some backstory info: I've been spoofing for a while, and got my first strike when the quests first arrived on the scene. So, I just had my iTools BT device arrive in the mail on Monday, and have been testing it constantly since then.
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