Same here. I find UEFI to be superior to BIOS, but secure boot, can be
problematic, but mostly because of who has to sign the boot loaders.
Most people that I have run into actually just have a beef with not
having the familiar MBR style of booting, but that just comes from a
lack of experience with proper UEFI boot experience, and not realizing
that the way UEFI boots things is completely different to the way BIOS
boots things... like not realizing that you are required to have a EFI
partition on your drive. Most of the time that I've seen an unbootable
UEFI system is because the whole system was partitioned without that
necessary partition, so the system will be fully installed, just without
any way to be booted.
Once I wrapped my head around the way UEFI boots systems I found it to
be a much better system than the old MBR method that tends to only allow
the last system to load to actually boot... especially if that last
system is windows.
Brian Cluff
On 05/03/2018 04:19 PM, Stephen Partington wrote:
I have had no issues with UEFI and Linux. The only time I have
arguments with it is surrounding the secure boot process and playing
nice with windows
On Thu, May 3, 2018, 4:00 PM Eric Oyen <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I suspect that he would like to remove at least 1.5 layers of
kernel code between the OS and the hardware.
Honestly, I really wish the UEFI consortium would get with the
program and compile in some BrltTY support (it's easy enough to do
considering that BrltTY is lightweight, can have it's libs
compiled in and should work under the UEFI Linux-like environment.
Believe me, having braille or speech available right from the POST
would greatly enhance my ability to deal with specific hardware
issues that crop up from time to time.
-eric
On May 3, 2018, at 3:35 PM, Stephen Partington wrote:
Bios is older than me. Is there a specific reason you want to
disable UEFI?
On Thu, May 3, 2018, 3:22 PM Matthew Crews
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
wrote:
On May 2, 2018 9:19 PM, <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> How can I disable UEFI on my Thinkpad T430
> so I can install Linux Mint 18?
>
> I've search the net and tried numerous "solutions"
> but can't get any of them to work.
My gut tells me that you can't on your specific machine. Most
motherboard vendors have deprecated BIOS support in favor of
UEFI, and Intel has specifically said that BIOS will not be
supported in 2020. Best get used to the idea of running with
UEFI, as much as we all hate it.
Perhaps what you should be looking to do is disable
SecureBoot, and then looking into installing Linux Mint 18 in
UEFI mode? I'd wager that the MInt installer supports UEFI.
Worst case you install Ubuntu or one of its variants, they
definitely support UEFI.
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