> On 4 May 2015, at 5:37 pm, Andrew McGlashan 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 4/05/2015 8:52 AM, Davor Balder wrote:
>> The only way around this would be to install your own trustworthy OS of
>> choice and treat your purchase as purchase of hardware only. Most (if
>> not all) people on this list are already doing this
> 
> True, but the time of buying a Windows appliance is upon us now or very
> soon.  Windows 10 will require UEFI with secure boot turned on and it
> may or may not allow secure boot to be turned off AND it may only have
> keys that work for Windows boxen.  When that happens, you'll have an
> appliance that will run Windows and it won't run anything else.
> 
Unfortunate, but true consequence of the stupidity that is presented by UEFI. 

However, I believe there will be some distributions that will work with UEFI 
(RedHat?, Ubuntu?). We may have reduced choice. I think distro needs to have 
some keys that will allow it to work with UEFI. 

I also read somewhere they (manufacturers) will have to allow installation of 
alternative OS’s. If this is the case, then UEFI will not have any point. 

At the very worst, you will (possibly) be able to buy only certain hardware 
that will allow UEFI to be turned off (assuming this is permitted by some and 
not allowed by others). 

Interesting times ahead… 
As a side note, I believe I have encountered UEFI on Lenovo hardware in the 
last few months and have been able to disable it with no problems. 

However, this may not be guaranteed in the future (despite reports I heard to 
the contrary). 


> A.
> 
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