UEFI is not the problem. As a matter of fact, it probably helps the Linux
enthusiasts break the Microsoft Monopoly better than anything I have seen
in a long time.
UEFI is designed such that there is one one boot secror. Instead, it had
128 boot records and that number can be extended
And maybe it was some confusion on my part. I did have to turn off the
UEFI? with On my Dell when I installed Linux on it.
On 2014-07-19 10:21, Kevin Fries wrote:
UEFI is not the problem. As a matter of fact, it probably helps the
Linux enthusiasts break the Microsoft Monopoly better than
problem there is no LAN port on either router. both have 4 ethernet
ports and one has 1 internet port, and the other (the modem) a phone port
and a line port.
:-)~MIKE~(-:
On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 3:36 PM, Gilbert T. Gutierrez, Jr.
mailing-li...@phoenixinternet.net wrote:
What you can do
Going the other way, you have no rules to pass
the communication through.
Why were rules written for the second router but not the first? Is it
because it was connected first? Could we write the rules we need?
:-)~MIKE~(-:
On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 3:34 PM, Gilbert T. Gutierrez, Jr.
Why were rules written for the second router but not the first?
Is it because it was connected first? Could we write the rules we need?
What I meant was the second was connected to the first.
:-)~MIKE~(-:
On Sat, Jul 19, 2014 at 11:31 AM, Michael Havens bmi...@gmail.com wrote:
Going the
Turning off uefi will turn off secure boot also. But secure boot is your
actual problem.
Kevin
On Jul 19, 2014 10:26 AM, techli...@phpcoderusa.com wrote:
And maybe it was some confusion on my part. I did have to turn off the
UEFI? with On my Dell when I installed Linux on it.
On
Is it possible to configure a linux box so that not data could be sent
from it that didn't exit via tor? I was thinking of using that box as a
router for other computers so they could access tor without anything
being done to them. The idea for this being to save having to configure
multiple