El vie, 21-09-2012 a las 08:58 +0200, Mateusz Marzantowicz escribió: > On 21.09.2012 07:42, Heinz Diehl wrote: > > On 21.09.2012, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote: > > > >>> To be able to boot any other system than Windows, you have to turn > >>> off secure boot or you could use your own keys signed by Microsoft. > >>> It's not (U)EFI which is the problem, it's the "secure boot". > >> AAAhhh!! NOW I think I understand!...... > > You can boot Fedora 18 with (U)EFI and secure boot turned on, of > > course. Because the Fedora kernel and programs are signed with a > > Fedora key, which itself is signed by M$. > > > > If you want to have "old-style" Fedora, you'll have to turn off secure > > boot. > > > > > > > > Sorry for my maybe stupid question but why there must my Microsoft's key > on motherboard and not Fedora's one? Why Linux vendors don't intend to > install theirs keys to revers the situation so that Microsoft would have > to sign the keys? Or maybe keys from M$ and Fedora could coexist? > > > Mateusz Marzantowicz
As far as I know, both keys (Microsoft and Fedora) can coexist. Regards, Lailah
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