Correction On 11/06/12 12:36, Scott Ferguson wrote:
<snipped> > add your own key to the UEFI... apparently that would *require you > typing it in* (256 characters). I can't confirm that as I had first hand access to the W8 pad, could be a bum steer. :-( Nothing in the published specs to show the format of the key or the procedure for adding a key for custom mode. I can see an upside if it's impossible to run Linux on OEM W8 devices - MS has lost it's market share and will become irrelevant anyway, more people buying devices without MS pre-installed is good for GNU/Linux - and few hardware manufacturers are going to pin their futures on MS anyway (just ask the retail industry how excited they are about Metro and the new Nokias), and manufacturers aren't going to kiss the parts market goodbye (which would require custom mode UEFI). When it comes to "OS conversions" there's plenty of pre-UEFI devices that'll be available second-hand, (more as MS fans move from XP), and I suspect dual booting doesn't have the conversion rate of a dedicated GNU/Linux machine. > Never going to happen - most Windoof users will want the > ability to run unsigned code, Various antimalware programs that need to load during the secure boot sequence, (and rootkits). Not Ffflash and Acrobat etc, I'm told W8 will boot in secure mode and run unsigned code - as long as it's post desktop (runs under user permissions). > hence the unsecure boot mode. Kind regards -- Iceweasel/Firefox/Chrome/Chromium/Iceape/IE extensions for finding answers to questions about Debian:- https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/collections/Scott_Ferguson/debian/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/4fd57c5d.5020...@gmail.com