On 30/01/15 10:10, Terry Duell wrote:
> To make a long story short, they claim that the MB will boot legacy
> boot structures with particular bios settings, which I am using. They
> also assert that they do not support linux and the linux driver is
> the issue, and that I should install Windows and test if I still have
> the problem.

To be fair to the motherboard manufacturer, this is a valid test.  It is 
entirely possible the UEFI implementation has only ever been tested with 
Windows.  It is a useful test to be able to see whether the system is actually 
able to boot at all off removable media.

You don't even have to purchase Windows to do this -- you can download the 
Windows 10 beta.  Simply download one of the 64-bit ISOs from this URL:

<http://windows.microsoft.com/en-au/windows/preview-iso>

Either burn that ISO to a DVD, or format a USB drive as FAT32 and copy the 
*contents* of the ISO (not the ISO itself) to the USB drive.  Then attempt to 
boot off it.

> Is the MB manufacturer correct to say that the linux driver is the
> cause of the problem?

For one distro, certainly a possibility.  For additional data points, test 
multiple distros, and follow instructions *to the letter*.

I also suggest testing against multiple UEFI implementations, to enable you to 
say "same media works on this, but doesn't work on this".
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