My experience with UEFI on HP and Lenovo laptops goes like this:
 * Unless you can import your distribution signing keys (openSuSE and SuSE 
installers do that automatically) or disable secure UEFI boot you will have 
various degrees of trouble double booting. Although the UEFI boot menu (usually 
F12) should still get you boot from whatever GTP partition you want to boot 
from.
 * Please note that disabling secure UEFI boot typically means that you get 
some degree of manual intervention hassle booting Win10
 * If you care about your Win installation, I recommend to create and verify 
Windows recovery media and automate or at least document your Linux install. 
This might come handy if you loose signed Win10 boot-loader or cannot boot 
Windows anymore or learn about to make the setup better.
 * Double booting is automatically setup by SuSE and Ubuntu installers 
typically only for the first time. So if you change distribution, reinstall or 
do not succeed at UEFI and Windows detection - you will need to 
adjust/configure the boot loader manually. I find it annoying at most because 
to manually configure UEFI require significant knowledge and I only do that 
once per couple of years, so I always forget wow it all works and do not have 
the days required to re-learn all that stuff - it is also moving target.
 * These days, I typically solve this by wiping Windows altogether and run it 
in VM under Linux if I need to, which I normally do not need to do.
Overall, I think that this UEFI thing is succeeding at making dual boot
predictably unpredictable hassle. That being said, it mostly lets you
boot Linux and Windows without too much of a fight even when enabled.
Warning - personal opinion below:
We went from a state where dual boot was so trivial to setup that the
installers almost always took care of it.
Today, Everybody who wants to dual boot Win10+, regardless whether they
can disable the secure boot or not, will have various degrees of
trouble running around the booting process. If a person does not have
any hassle now, they can expect it in the future either with the boot
process itself or loading compiled drivers, kernel, etc at least once
in a while at reinstall times.
Tomas
On Tue, 2017-03-28 at 10:57 -0700, VY wrote:
> Hello All:
> 
> 
> We have an HP laptop that we attempted to install Linux on it.  At
> the very
> end, there were issues in writing the bootloader (laptop is UEFI
> based).
> 
> Right now, it won’t boot up.
> 
> 
> 
> Do you know how Linux can be installed on such kind of laptop?
> 
> Before I Google, I thought I ask about any personal experience here.
> 
> 
> thanks
> 
> 
> -v
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