Anno domini 2020 Wed, 15 Jul 21:35:31 -0700
William Morder via trinity-users scripsit:
On Wednesday 15 July 2020 17:17:54 Felmon Davis
wrote:
greets!
I have a new notebook I want to install Debian/Trinity on.
'Secure Boot' is turned on. maybe this doesn't account for the
problems I'm having but my question is about it.
in the BIOS I can turn it off but it says doing so "requires platform
reset." turning it off within Windows simply reboots to the BIOS.
I can't figure out if this is just another word for 'reboot'
or does it have other consequences? googling yields no clear (or
trustworthy) answer.
it's an Asus Zenbook with Windows 10 Home; BIOS is American Megatrends
version 300.
f.
Hail, Felmon!
I believe that the "platform" refers to Windoze, Linux or the rotten
Apple, etc. Some software is called cross-platform, meaning that it works
on different systems, so "platform reset" would seem to mean that you
must install a different OS.
Be careful, though. I have a friend who bricked a brand-new laptop trying
to install Linux on a system with UEFI.
This question is to myself, as well, as I am looking for a good deal on a
laptop, and want to do the same. I feel sure that somebody on the Trinity
mailing list will have more experience in this matter.
Fortunately I know "a guy" who knows his way around these traps. And I
remember that he had a flash drive specially designed for resetting the
platform, or getting past the UEFI or whatever. When I see him again --
probably in the next few days -- I will try to find out more, and maybe
get myself a clone of his flash drive. (If possible, I will share the
contents of that flash drive, or provide references so others can get
their own.)
Don't proceed until you are sure here. It's better to wait than to end up
with a paperweight.
Bill
You should be able to boot the installer with secureboot enabled. If not,
you'll have to disable it and m aybe "repair" windows. Might be that
it'll
delete the contents of the efi boot partition, might be it does not.
Anyway, who needs windows?
Nik