On 24 August 2011, at 23:33, Paul Hartman wrote:
> ...
> I have never used a MacBook, and haven't used any Mac since they had
> black & white screens, but I believe the problem is that its firmware
> uses EFI for booting, and not the usual BIOS/MBR boot like a normal PC
> would use. and your system rescue CD probably doesn't have the
> necessary files.

Yes, I suspect OP needs to run the Boot Camp Assistant (in Applications > 
Utilities).

I think that does something like enable a BIOS compatibility mode in EFI - 
after installation I have certainly been able to boot from conventional 
bootable CDs. It talks about inserting a Windows CD, but I don't think there's 
any difference in the booting methods of a Windows XP install CD and a 
systemrescueCD. I believe both emulate a floppy in the first 2meg of the CD 
image. I'm pretty sure I've been able to boot using systemrescueCD on a 
dual-boot (XP / OS X) Mac system.

> If you google "macbook efi linux usb boot" or
> something, maybe there will be more specific info about how to solve
> it.

You're fundamentally right, although I would go for "install linux Mac" myself. 
The results may refer to installing other distros, such as Ubuntu, but it's 
surely just a matter of adapting the instructions to get partitions and a 
systemrescueCD root prompt.

I think there are alternative methods, besides Boot Camp, to get multi-boot. 
Boot Camp sets up a second partition, but I don't believe it can do a third. I 
believe it's possible to get triple-boot (for example) on a Mac, but you're 
obliged not to use Boot Camp in this case.

Stroller.


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