Once upon a time, John M. Harris Jr <joh...@splentity.com> said:
> This change is about testing those ISO images, and whether or not those ISO 
> images are release-blocking. If it's not a valid CD image (meaning it 
> wouldn't 
> boot when put into a real disk drive), it most likely wouldn't work in the 
> virtual CD images.

No, it is just about not writing those ISO images to physical media for
testing.  The ISO images will still be blocking deliverables.  Testing
of ISOs is easy and can be done automated.  Testing of physical media
requires time.

> This also doesn't solve anything for the users 
> that have first or second generation UEFI systems, or those with UEFI 
> firmware 
> provided by a vendor, that doesn't support USB boot.

So again, if UEFI boot doesn't work, don't use it?  I tried UEFI boot
with an early generation, and it had multiple issues, so I stuck with
BIOS boot for a while longer.  There's nothing in Fedora that requires
UEFI boot.

> Instead of trying to attack CD/DVD installs, why not keep what's working in 
> the state it's already in?

Because it's a time-consuming and manual process, and resources are
limited?
-- 
Chris Adams <li...@cmadams.net>
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