BIOS and UEFI

Revision as of 16:52, 24 June 2014 by imported>Runpc2deth

Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI)

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As the UEFI system sits on top of the old BIOS system, UEFI can be disabled or even removed completely to run in Legacy Mode, meaning that the BIOS has taken back over. The author did so with a laptop using a 1 Terabyte (TB) hard-disk, which the BIOS can handle.


UEFI was introduced with Windows 8 as a replacement / upgrade to the BIOS system. One example of this upgrade is that it allows for computers to use hard-disks larger than 2 Terabytes (2,000 Gigabytes). Unfortunately, UEFI was also secretly manipulated by Microsoft in tandem with certain hardware manufacturers to prevent - or at least make it very difficult - to replace or dual boot Windows 8 with another operating system.


Can't boot Manjaro on your Windows 8 system? Here's why!
Disable UEFI to run like any pre-Windows 8 system.


Overcome the odds!


Explains the differences.

Basic Input / Output System (BIOS)

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Some unpleasant hardware manufacturers have configured the BIOS to automatcially disable the screen backlight if Windows has been removed, resulting in a dim screen. A guide has been provided to reactivate the backlight.


The GRUB is used to manage and boot up linux operating systems on computers that use the BIOS system. These are typically older computers or those that did not come with Windows 8 pre-installed. It is worthwhile noting that the UEFI can be disabled on many systems to run using the BIOS instead; this is known as running in Legacy Mode. Computers sold prior to the release and pre-installation of Windows 8 - which introduced UEFI - will therefore use the BIOS.


A BIOS-related problem: how dare you remove Windows!


Enable virtualisation in your BIOS settings.


Easily customize GRUB2 with the Grub-Customizer GUI tool.


What to do if something goes wrong...