I've had this issue in Ubuntu, and found the most reliable way is to use a UEFI Boot MANAGER (not Boot Loader) or put the EFI Shell Intel has provided onto a flash drive this way:
/boot/efi/bootx64.efi <----rename the shellx64.efi to bootx64.efi then put it in that path if you were able to install something like rEFInd on Windows 7, just select the efi mode of Debian (I can safely do the same for Ubuntu, though 12.10 doesn't need it, as EFI boot is the default boot for EFI systems, (this has me wondering if this can be pushed upstream to Debian) If you, like me, couldn't figure out how to install rEFInd on windows, then things are a bit more complicated, you'd have to boot from said flash drive, or the EFI shell if your computer has it, and then figure out the block device that is the Debian installation media, and the cd to the efi folder through a chain of cd's, and execute the .efi file you'll find there that represents the installer or GRUB, the EFI shell may look confusing because, well, it IS confusing for most, it's like mixing the syntax of BASH and cmd together and using the result. --c_smith -- 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/50b57547.4050...@gmail.com