[GTALUG] UEFI bios/firmware

Abby maxcess at gmx.com
Tue Aug 11 14:47:12 UTC 2015


    
Hello LenThank you for your help.In at least 3 computers I have come across, that has this option grayed out. As shown in pic1 of that link you supplied. So it is not accessible. Every link I came across, basicly had the same solution you described. There for those three computers can not have a true format done. All three have corrupted hinden partions. Putting a new hard drive will not help either. New mother boards would help.Cheers Abby


Sent from my Samsung device

-------- Original message --------
From: Lennart Sorensen <lsorense at csclub.uwaterloo.ca> 
Date: 08-11-2015  10:25  (GMT-05:00) 
To: GTALUG Talk <talk at gtalug.org> 
Subject: Re: [GTALUG] UEFI bios/firmware 

On Tue, Aug 11, 2015 at 12:39:02AM +0200, Abby Bassie-Cripps wrote:
> <html><head></head><body><div style="font-family: Verdana;font-size: 12.0px;"><div>
> <div>Hello Len</div>
> 
> <div> </div>
> 
> <div>That was very informative, thank you.</div>
> 
> <div> </div>
> 
> <div>For an update, the main computer is question is a toshiba satellite with win 8.1. In this once case, I could not find any default to unlock the secure boot.</div>
> 
> <div>In addition, all of the computers that have come my way with UEFI, are windows 8 & 8.1 and are all secure in some form or another. I know have three computers that where given to me because of the UEFI / secure boot issue. I have never come across a computer that used UEFI and was not secure booted. All other computers I have worked on, have been using bios.</div>
> 
> <div>Seperately, I have what was a $1400 laptop that came with win. 7. It had UEFI, but was the only computer not using secure boot. I have since put 8.1 and now 10 on it and it works better than 7, using UEFI. Its secure boot was apart of the UEFI. Hense my mis-understanding.</div>
> 
> <div>
> <div>For the group, I perfer Ubuntu and now my iMac with OS X 10.10.4. There is so little issues with both, compared to windows OS.</div>
>
> <div> </div>
> 
> <div>So Len, are you able to tell me what the steps should be to disable the secure boot in windows 8 & 8.1? Other than the simple out dated method that we all know about?</div>

Well from what I can find the process is:

When you see Toshiba logo, hit F2, then you should be in the UEFI (BIOS)
settings.

Under security tab there should be an option for 'secure boot' which
you want to set to disabled.  If you want to keep windows working,
that should be all you change, and then you should be able to install
linux as long as the distribution is new enough to support UEFI booting.
If you don't want to keep windows and you want to use an older style
distribution that does not do UEFI booting, then you have to also find
the "CSM boot" setting (under advanced/system settings) and turn that on.
That will break booting windows 8.1 on the machine though.  I would
personally stick with UEFI booting these days.

https://aps2.toshiba-tro.de/kb0/TSB2B03F30002R01.htm

-- 
Len Sorensen
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