Phillip,

If you press Try Ubuntu, you can then open a terminal and launch
ubiquity with the -b flag set.

Just because a particular bit of UI existed in the past is not
sufficient reason alone for it to exist today. Part of the design goal
of the desktop CD installer is to be simple, only do what it absolutely
must, then get out of the way. If you need more flexibility than what it
offers, please use the alternate CD. Though I must point out that this
option did not go away, it's simply exposed in a different way.

If you find my response insufficient, can you please cite a sufficiently
large use case where someone would be familiar enough with bootloaders
to know that they did not need one, but not familiar enough with the
terminal to use it?

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/690926

Title:
  Installer forces you to install grub somewhere

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