The Dell uefi bios on their latitude series has not given me any issue at all with any os. Except OSX, and that is a special weirdness. Asus gaming oriented board tend to be (for lack of a better word) persnickety. And mostly this was an issue with trying to wrangle a dual boot scenario with Windows 10 and they were writing over each other in the boot space of the bios. Even when using grub. It was strange. But the board I have is one of those prosumer/gamer oriented boards so it does not have the simplicity of their workstation boards or dell's work oriented hardware. On Apr 19, 2016 11:18 AM, "Michael Butash" wrote: > I agree here, it is an important factor, but really only to us linux > folk. Windoze people remain blissfully ignorant mostly except when dealing > with the horrible bioses these days built for uefi. I think diy mobo's > will remain safe, but laptops are a wildcard when dealing with non-business > class devices. Dell seems good about keeping legacy boot options at least, > and keeping some sense of linux friendliness in general (they do have a > desktop linux mailing list people respond on). > > Getting that asus laptop that would "only" do uefi was just painful as I > had ass-u-me'd that it *could* be switched to legacy boot, and delayed my > usability significantly since forcing me to learn some new method with > questionable value. UEFI just seems like another half-way good idea turned > terrible by letting microsoft steer and dictate its implementation, as they > seemed the only one that cared, and obviously only about the windoze > implementation. > > I'm all for learning something new, but not when the only value is keeping > the relevance of windoze on my hardware, which is entirely undesirable. > > -mb > > > On 04/19/2016 10:34 AM, Steve Litt wrote: > >> On Tue, 19 Apr 2016 10:02:03 -0700 >> Wayne D wrote: >> >> >> Some day UEFI might be good, but right now you hear too much about >>>> people bricking their mobos via interaction with their OS and the >>>> UEFI storage area, or Linux people doing rm -rf only to find out >>>> that included the mounted UEFI variable area. >>>> >>>> And then there's the whole Secure Boot fiasco. No problem if you >>>> use a major Linux that's purchased a key from Microsoft, but all >>>> bets are off if you compile your own kernel. >>>> >>> >>> You really know how to pee on a parade... LOL Ya, I'm cringing a >>> little over this one. >>> >> If mobo makers want to force UEFI, or worse, Secure Boot on us, well, >> I guess that's their right. But this is such an important thing, I >> think that ability to boot MBR and ability to turn off Secure Boot >> should be a very prominent spec, right along with number of memory >> slots and enumeration of extension slots. >> >> The fact that you have to find these things out after having the >> product shipped to you, and then play the RMA game or just eat >> something you don't want, is inexcusable. >> >> You should contact the manufacturer, and ask it point blank: >> >> 1) Can you boot to a genuine MBR, and how? >> 2) Can you turn off Secure Boot, and how? >> >> SteveT >> >> Steve Litt >> April 2016 featured book: Rapid Learning for the 21st Century >> http://www.troubleshooters.com/rl21 >> --------------------------------------------------- >> PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org >> To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: >> http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >> > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >