Because the motherboard *has* UEFI may not actually require you to *use*
it. Check and see if it has a legacy BIOS mode. If it does, you can use
that and keep going. If not, then using UEFI requires (at the least)
creation of a UEFI boot partition and changes to the bootloader
configuration.
--Greg
On Mon, Mar 2, 2015 at 3:42 PM, Bob Goodwin <bobgoodwin(a)wildblue.net> wrote:
I had a failure last week and have just received a new motherboard to
replace the old one. I see that it has a lot of wonderful features for
Windows that I don't need, among them UEFI.
Am I going to have trouble running Fedora 21 on it? I guess I need to know
that before installing it. The instruction manual is of little help, mainly
describes installing it as a Windows 8 system using the included
installation disk, none of which I will ever see.
Bob
--
http://www.qrz.com/db/W2BOD
box10 Fedora-21/64bit Linux/XFCE
--
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