On Thu, 04 Dec 2014 14:46:09 -0500
Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> wrote:
I was recently given a Mac Mini (Intel Mid 2007) that had been wiped.
I tried to install Debian (Wheezy) on it, and the installer reported
success, but when it came time to eject and reboot, Debian didn't
boot from the hard drive.
[...]
Is there a way to install Debian/Linux on this machine that doesn't involve
buying or borrowing (or "borrowing") a copy of OSX?
If you managed to boot a plain-normal Debian CDROM installer, then your
machine's firmware has full BIOS support and you can boot a plain-normal
Debian install on the harddisk as well, as if the machine were
a normal PC.
Hmm... I was able to boot a plain-normal (I assume it is) Debian CDROM installer, but now I can't boot the plain-normal (I assume) Debian install that the installer said it installed.
The two questions I have:
Can I still assume that I have the firmware version that I want?
What do I do next to troubleshoot/fix this?
Another random question:
The installer gave me the choice of installing Grub on the partition or on the Master Boot Record. Which of these should I choose?