laserboy417

Tinkerer

Comments

  • Hi BrianBernon, As you can see, my original post and subsequent comments were related to installing Linux distros and they way they work with EFI. If JackE's comment does not solve your problem and you have Linux installed, then take a look in /boot/efi/EFI, find the folder named for your Linux distro and if there is a…
  • A schoolboy error on my part. When I installed Manjaro I was so keen to see if I could boot it and whether it would affect my ability to access the BIOS, that I didn't install the post installation updates. I booted openSUSE and ran grub install (actually the bootloader application in Yast) to include Manjaro in the…
  • A schoolboy error on my part. When I installed Manjaro I was so keen to see if I could boot it and whether it would affect my ability to access the BIOS, that I didn't install the post installation updates. I booted openSUSE and ran grub install (actually the bootloader application in Yast) to include Manjaro in the…
  • A schoolboy error on my part. When I installed Manjaro I was so keen to see if I could boot it and whether it would affect my ability to access the BIOS, that I didn't install the post installation updates. I booted openSUSE and ran grub install (actually the bootloader application in Yast) to include Manjaro in the…
  • Hmm..... I've playing around with efibootmgr, the BIOS and files in /boot/efi/EFI and also doing some more research into the UEFI boot process.This is what I've found based on the InsydeH20 BIOS on my Aspire A515-55-564P laptop and the openSUSE Tumbleweed Linux I have installed alongside Windows10:Changing things in…
  • Thanks PlanetMercury. I've had a similar problem after installing Fedora32 alongside Windows and openSUSE Tumbleweed. Being introduced to efibootmgr was the key to solving my problem. See https://community.acer.com/en/discussion/comment/913757#Comment_913757
  • Nice to hear from you again egydiocoelho, but I didn't take your advice, which sounded a bit too drastic!JackE, thanks for pointing me to that link, it provided the answer to my problem. I won't go through the process that I followed in detail. In essence this is what I had to do:Deleted the Fedora disk partition (after…
  • OK that all worked.When I rebooted into safe mode after changing to AHCI, it booted to a command prompt, which threw me. So I decided to use aphanic's bcdedit to remove safe boot. Not being great with Windows (I am a long time UNIX/Linux person - over 30 years! My first UNIX system was a 286 PC running Microsoft Xenix -…
  • Hi egydiocoelho and aphanic. Thanks for your quick response. I had rather assumed from other Linux forum posts that I would need to switch to AHCI, but couldn't see how. I've checked and I can make the change in the BIOS using CTRL+s. However, I am little confused by your different approaches to it. aphanic suggests simply…
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