I'm using a nearly 10 year old server, bought specifically so I can compile 
faster.  None of my machines is newer than that.  None of my machines support 
UEFI other than an older imac.  The server, which was inexpensive ($500) only 
has 48 cores, 64 as soon as I update the processors (2 generations newer and 
more cores!).
I love server grade hardware!  Servers lose value quickly, they are a great 
bargain if you don't mind the sound of a wind tunnel or have another room to 
put it in.  This machine was probably $20-30K new, no slouch, it was previously 
used for high frequency trading.  Sadly the seller does seem to have emptied 
their' warehouse.


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‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Thursday, May 14, 2020 11:50 AM, Andrew Udvare <audv...@gmail.com> wrote:

> > On 2020-05-12, at 18:45, Alan Grimes alonz...@verizon.net wrote:
> > Why is this not a forced-on setting for any machine with UEFI enabled? I
> > can't imagine that this would be unacceptable for more than 0.001% of
> > the install base.
>
> Because not every user has UEFI and many just use the BIOS compatibility 
> layer (CSM) if they don't care about UEFI and Secure Boot. The CSM is going 
> to be there for a very long time.
>
> If you don't need UEFI features, then there's nothing really wrong with using 
> CSM. I am using UEFI because I like having a signed kernel and signed boot 
> loader (systemd-boot).
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Andrew



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