Unfortunately, just a tiny percentage of sold X86 boxes is no-OS, and also dell has stopped selling linux PCs. The last "no-OS" one I bought was an HP laptop (HP 360) with suse 11 onboard. Drops within an ocean. Unless EU Commission helps, it'll be a hell of a scenery....
On Sat, Sep 24, 2011 at 4:13 PM, Marc Smith <marc_sm...@gmx.com> wrote: > This has been already explained in multiple articles, really. It looks > like it's OEMs stuff. They decide whether they give the end user an > option to disable secure boot or not. > It's probobly the best to buy only "No OS" computers anyway. You can > also support various open BIOS initiatives. > > Dnia sob, 24 wrz 2011, 15:36:21 Amit Kulkarni pisze: > > http://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/5850.html > > > > in the future how will we have access to OpenBSD if Microsoft get away > > with it? right now most of us buy Windows enabled PCs and either dual > > boot or wipe it out... > > > > thanks