Beta access is now tied directly to a user's Apple ID . If you are signed into a device with an account registered in the Apple Beta Software Program (free) or the Developer Program, a "Beta Updates" menu appears automatically in Settings > General > Software Update .
That’s it. No Ruby version conflicts. No 2FA timeouts. Just a curl command.
While our name says "Beta," our architecture supports as well. We support the full lifecycle: betaprofiles.dev
You’ve just polished the final feature. The code compiles. The unit tests are green. Yet, before a single external user can tap your icon, you descend into the tangled undergrowth of the Apple Developer Portal. You’re regenerating provisioning profiles, wrestling with UDIDs, and manually re-downloading .mobileprovision files.
We understand the gravity of what we handle. Your signing artifacts are the skeleton keys to your app. That is why : Beta access is now tied directly to a user's Apple ID
is a well-known third-party platform that provides access to Apple's pre-release software updates , including iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS betas. It serves as a central hub for users who want to test upcoming Apple features before they are officially released to the public. What is BetaProfiles.dev?
Because of this change, BetaProfiles.dev has evolved into an educational resource that provides instructions on how to enable these settings and still offers profiles for older, legacy versions of iOS. Developer Beta vs. Public Beta No Ruby version conflicts
[Start your free trial →] (https://betaprofiles.dev/signup)