Wrong passwords beware: Protect-Me revision 0.9g PSP homebrew
With the well-documented homebrew Protect-Me from French dev MaxTheBest, you can set a password for your Sony PlayStation Portable to ward off unwanted users. Today, dev MaxTheBest upgraded the homebrew to revision 0.9g. What are the changes since the previous build? Let’s just say you’re in for a world of hurt if you forget your password. More details over at the full article.
Download: Protect-Me final revision 0.9g
Visit: QJ.NET’s PSP Development Forums
Developer MaxTheBest‘s homebrew application Protect-Me has always been about passwords and your Sony PlayStation Portable’s security. After last build’s covert-display feature, the homebrew Protect-Me has been upgraded to Final Revision version 0.9g.
What are the changes this time? Dev MaxTheBest has added credits and a means to make your Sony PSP unbootable from the XMB when confronted with wrong passwords. For those Sony PSP thefts (provided they don’t know your password), all they will see from the screen is the phrase “this PSP received a bad password input on XXX.”
What happens if you forget your own password? Will you not be able to access your PSP? No, don’t be scared. Coder MaxTheBest says there will be a way to recover it. We won’t say it here though because the purpose of the homebrew will be lost. Contact developer MaxTheBest from the via link below for your inquiries.
For the detailed logs of changes since the first build and a step-by-step guide on how to install this homebrew, check the attached readme from the file download.
Download: Protect-Me final revision 0.9g
Visit: QJ.NET’s PSP Development Forums