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Re: (OT) Disable Secure Boot, et al



On Fri, 5 Aug 2016 08:00:04 +0200 didier gaumet
<didier.gaumet@gmail.com> wrote:

> Le 05/08/2016 à 02:25, Patrick Bartek a écrit :
> > Hi! All,
> > 
> > Anyway to enter UEFI Firmware Setup on contemporary UEFI W8/10
> > notebooks without having to go through Windows?  That is, is there
> > a keyboard combo, secret button or incantation whether or not a
> > hard drive/OS is installed. As far as my research goes, there's not.
> 
> https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh825112.aspx

Thanks, but it seems that with W10 that procedure, at least on some
notebooks is no longer available, and you must boot fully into W10 to
get the UEFI Firmware Settings menu.  Progress.

> The dual-boot HP little notebook I am using right now to answer your
> question was factory installed with Windows 8, has migrated to Windows
> 10 and still enters at boot in UEFI management mode by pressing a Fn
> key (probably F9, I don't remember)

I'm finding from reading user manuals that the options and procedures
vary manufacturer to manufacturer  with more and more really locking
down the system to Windows 10 making it difficult, if not impossible,
to install Linux.  Guess I'll have to be very particular which
manufacturer/notebook I purchase.

> > I'm looking to buy a new notebook to put a custom install of Linux
> > on with as few problems as possible.  Which distro remains to be
> > chosen, but it definitely WON'T be Ubuntu (I've always hated it) or
> > SUSE or Fedora which I abandoned because of its 6 month release
> > cycles and 13 month support.
> 
> If your only gripe with Fedora is the 6 months release circle, you
> could be interested in CentOS which nowadays is essentially a Red Hat
> trademark and their free-of-charge-with-no-support version of RHEL.
> And an advantage of RHEL/CentOS from version 7 on, that could be
> valuable to you, is its ability to boot in Secure Mode.

Last time I checked CentOS (last year) didn't support Secure Boot
like RHEL.  Maybe, that's changed.  Although, I consider Cent & RHEL
more suited for servers than general use computing.  However, I'll
revisit CentOS..

Thanks for you input.

B


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