Thanks for the clear explanation! mainly here cause of windows 11 but I think it's ridiculous to be forced into using UEFI. The whole point of having a PC is you can do what you want with it.
I had a similar problem on my Acer laptop. My SSD containing Windows failed and I installed a new SSD. I couldn't boot from anything else apart from an unformatted disk with no OS. You have to go into the UEFI and under the "Security" tab, introduce a supervisor password. This will allow you to shut down Secure Boot and load a new OS from a USB stick. As many recent laptops don't have DVD burners or SD Card readers, external USB peripherals won't work apart from a bootable USB stick.
So I understand, I have to pay for the PC and I have to pay for the OS but I´m not allowed to control what I payed for. I only pay to be controlled by others.
If a manufacturer prevents me from booting from any other device than the internal drive, I'm not gonna buy that device - so, I guess the Surface is out for me - shame - was actually considering it - but now I know what to look and ask for when buying a computer - choice of boot device (HDD, CD, USB, etc) and boot order is a MUST on ANY computer - if not possible, it is the manufacturer trying to control you, as the actual user, and NOT to protect you!
Well then learn to use an abacus because ALL NEW MOTHERBOARDS have a UEFI set up on them, there is no getting around them unless you can burn your own Eprom. if you can good luck if not just suck it up.
@@Delgen1951 I didn't say that I was agaist UEFI - I actually think it is pretty cool ... ... I said that I was agaist a manufactor deciding what I want to do with MY computer that I paid money for.
I know that I am late to this party, but I have a rather strange situation. My gaming rig died a week ago, and a friend loaned me a Dell OptiPlex 9010 that has been refurbished and has an SSD (C: drive) and a 2 TB HDD , 8 Gb DDR 3 RAM and a Win 10 Pro OS. The PC runs quite well with the I7-3770 CPU , is fast, boots quickly and has been very stable. I wanted to add a low power draw GPU to it, it has an empty PCI-E slot, so I added an RX 560 AMD card that I have and rebooted the PC. It doesn't "see" the card at all. I now know that this PC has a Legacy BIOS and needs to be UEFI in order to "see" that GPU. And then the hell began.... I cannot get this PC to accept any of the PowerShell(Admin) commands to partition the OS drive for UEFI boot. Every command results in red errors. mgr2gpt/convert/allowfullos should reconfigure this PCs BIOS but it does not... I have watched various videos until I am blind and haven't gotten anywhere with this problem. Can you possibly enlighten me? Thank you in advance.
Hi Leo! I am glad to find your video to have more understanding of BIOS and UEFI. I don't have any security issue with my laptop at a moment. But, I did read UEFI offer you fast booting than BIOS. I'm still using DELL Laptop Inspiron n4110 series (yeah I know it is quite old). Do you think it is worth it if I convert to UEFI just to get faster boot? Thank you anyway.
@@askleonotenboom just to add a bit to your reply, I'll mention that if your existing build can be converted to UEFI (many new motherboards have both options) you'll need to reinstall your operating system. There are some workarounds out there but they look more troublesome than a reinstall anyway.
bios always had passwords so you can't tinker, but what's inside bios anyway, my pics and documents? and once somebody is near my pc and wants my data, he can easilly steal my hdds. so all this talk about uefi bringing security is moot....
hi leo. i'm still kind of a noob at computers but was wondering if you could tell me if gpt and mbr boot have anything to do with these two booting systems. is one exclusive to the other? can you use these interchangeably on both, etc? and thanks for your short and digestible tech snippets.
GPT and MBR are the file systems used by UEFI and BIOS if you enable Legacy boot you can boot from MBR in UEFI but cannot boot from GPT in BIOS, I hope this helps.
I can't understand the difference between legacy and uefi about the boot process and security,you can easily modify boot order in uefi and boot from usb if you like
As far as I can say, UEFI is a pile of irritation! Seems to me it's main purpose was to satisfy M$ policy to fight piracy. As long as there would be MoBos options to disable Secure Boot, so you can go with legacy boot too, I wouldn't care about it. Once they would disable that, I would remain happy with any older HW, and under no circumstances would by a New One. The best way to secure your data is an OUTER USB HDD or USB flash drive to keep data there only. Off course, aside off disabling any auto handling of your data by OS, you have to modify a lot (I mean A LOT) of settings in Windows itself. As the best in Windows OS was and remain, is -CUSTOMIZATION. Once this might get substantially reduced or even abandoned with next versions… well, then bye bye anything newer from M$. However, there is one a bit greater evil from UEFI - inability to quickly remove battery from "more sophisticated" laptops and "Smart" Phones! PS - Aside of all above, love your great work and your website. Thank you for being here and there!
Hi sir, i have gigabyte motherboard it printed on my board GA-H61M-S1 rev 2.2 uefi bios usb blocker . Problem is that my usb keyboard and mouse work properly but usb storage not connected with my pc... Error show driver not able to install... Please help me
That's more likely a function of your operating system, which you didn't mention. The error message also probably included more information than just "not able to install' - can you provide that? Details mater a lot.
I have an Asus laptop model Q550LF for home use,and because of this UEFI, I’m, unable to use it for almost a month now. Any suggestions on how to go about it would be very much appreciated.
Hi sir I dont know if u still awnser to comments and my question look its happned two times already in my win7 ; when I turn it on, sometimes its gives me a blue screen and up of it is black and its says : gigabyte-uefi DualBIOS then its turns off and again on and shows no screen then this happnes again and finally my pc will load up do u know what's my pc problem???
@@wtgsoap8426 There's no way to know. It certainly possible that it's a sign of something about to die, but it's also possible that it's something else.
I'm sooo sorry I know I talked alot but is there any common thing can happen like that?or any fixing way;One of my friends says if I format my drive c and inestall a new windows its will be fixed can it be true?
I'lllet you know how MY little 2-year struggle with a BIOS-LOCKED toshiba laptop turns out. I've recently thought up a new plan. I ain't giving up on it, it's too good of a computer to let go to waist in the LAPTOP GRAVEYARD I've got stored under my bed~
As I see it, for most people it makes no difference.for some conservative users it's great.but I'm in the part of people who suffer from that. They screw up almost all Linux users.
UEFI should be a choice. Don’t take over my computer. Don’t answer questions for me. You don’t know me. It’s just another control of my life. BS My 3 cents. 👏🏾🇺🇸😎
Thanks for the clear explanation! mainly here cause of windows 11 but I think it's ridiculous to be forced into using UEFI. The whole point of having a PC is you can do what you want with it.
You don't have to use windows?
@@Toby_the_Glen sb (secure boot) make switching to linux more of a nightmare
I had a similar problem on my Acer laptop. My SSD containing Windows failed and I installed a new SSD. I couldn't boot from anything else apart from an unformatted disk with no OS. You have to go into the UEFI and under the "Security" tab, introduce a supervisor password. This will allow you to shut down Secure Boot and load a new OS from a USB stick. As many recent laptops don't have DVD burners or SD Card readers, external USB peripherals won't work apart from a bootable USB stick.
So I understand, I have to pay for the PC and I have to pay for the OS but I´m not allowed to control what I payed for.
I only pay to be controlled by others.
If a manufacturer prevents me from booting from any other device than the internal drive, I'm not gonna buy that device - so, I guess the Surface is out for me - shame - was actually considering it - but now I know what to look and ask for when buying a computer - choice of boot device (HDD, CD, USB, etc) and boot order is a MUST on ANY computer - if not possible, it is the manufacturer trying to control you, as the actual user, and NOT to protect you!
Well then learn to use an abacus because ALL NEW MOTHERBOARDS have a UEFI set up on them, there is no getting around them unless you can burn your own Eprom. if you can good luck if not just suck it up.
@@Delgen1951 I didn't say that I was agaist UEFI - I actually think it is pretty cool ...
... I said that I was agaist a manufactor deciding what I want to do with MY computer that I paid money for.
I know that I am late to this party, but I have a rather strange situation. My gaming rig died a week ago, and a friend loaned me a Dell OptiPlex 9010 that has been refurbished and has an SSD (C: drive) and a 2 TB HDD , 8 Gb DDR 3 RAM and a Win 10 Pro OS. The PC runs quite well with the I7-3770 CPU , is fast, boots quickly and has been very stable.
I wanted to add a low power draw GPU to it, it has an empty PCI-E slot, so I added an RX 560 AMD card that I have and rebooted the PC.
It doesn't "see" the card at all. I now know that this PC has a Legacy BIOS and needs to be UEFI in order to "see" that GPU. And then the hell began....
I cannot get this PC to accept any of the PowerShell(Admin) commands to partition the OS drive for UEFI boot. Every command results in red errors. mgr2gpt/convert/allowfullos should reconfigure this PCs BIOS but it does not...
I have watched various videos until I am blind and haven't gotten anywhere with this problem.
Can you possibly enlighten me?
Thank you in advance.
Hi Leo! I am glad to find your video to have more understanding of BIOS and UEFI. I don't have any security issue with my laptop at a moment. But, I did read UEFI offer you fast booting than BIOS. I'm still using DELL Laptop Inspiron n4110 series (yeah I know it is quite old). Do you think it is worth it if I convert to UEFI just to get faster boot? Thank you anyway.
I don't believe you can convert, one or the other is built into the motherboard. At any rate I would not convert for boot speed, no.
@@askleonotenboom just to add a bit to your reply, I'll mention that if your existing build can be converted to UEFI (many new motherboards have both options) you'll need to reinstall your operating system. There are some workarounds out there but they look more troublesome than a reinstall anyway.
@@stephenwerner1662 Thanks!
This is for me "BIOS/UEFI" in a nutshell .. Thanks Leo!
bios always had passwords so you can't tinker, but what's inside bios anyway, my pics and documents?
and once somebody is near my pc and wants my data, he can easilly steal my hdds.
so all this talk about uefi bringing security is moot....
BIOS does not contain your pics and documents - those are stored on your hard disk.
@@askleonotenboom it was a rhetorical joke question. The message was: secure booting is unnecessary and somewhat concerning 😒
hi leo. i'm still kind of a noob at computers but was wondering if you could tell me if gpt and mbr boot have anything to do with these two booting systems. is one exclusive to the other? can you use these interchangeably on both, etc? and thanks for your short and digestible tech snippets.
GPT and MBR are the file systems used by UEFI and BIOS if you enable Legacy boot you can boot from MBR in UEFI but cannot boot from GPT in BIOS, I hope this helps.
I can't understand the difference between legacy and uefi about the boot process and security,you can easily modify boot order in uefi and boot from usb if you like
UEFI can be configured to prevent that.
Leo is right about that it cant be done from the X570 and latter boards UEFI is set as the default.
As far as I can say, UEFI is a pile of irritation! Seems to me it's main purpose was to satisfy M$ policy to fight piracy. As long as there would be MoBos options to disable Secure Boot, so you can go with legacy boot too, I wouldn't care about it. Once they would disable that, I would remain happy with any older HW, and under no circumstances would by a New One. The best way to secure your data is an OUTER USB HDD or USB flash drive to keep data there only. Off course, aside off disabling any auto handling of your data by OS, you have to modify a lot (I mean A LOT) of settings in Windows itself. As the best in Windows OS was and remain, is -CUSTOMIZATION. Once this might get substantially reduced or even abandoned with next versions… well, then bye bye anything newer from M$. However, there is one a bit greater evil from UEFI - inability to quickly remove battery from "more sophisticated" laptops and "Smart" Phones!
PS - Aside of all above, love your great work and your website. Thank you for being here and there!
You are great person. I love to see your videos.
my laptop cant got to uefi with the f2 key and secure boot just make linux more hard to use ....
Hi sir, i have gigabyte motherboard it printed on my board GA-H61M-S1 rev 2.2 uefi bios usb blocker . Problem is that my usb keyboard and mouse work properly but usb storage not connected with my pc... Error show driver not able to install... Please help me
That's more likely a function of your operating system, which you didn't mention. The error message also probably included more information than just "not able to install' - can you provide that? Details mater a lot.
I have an Asus laptop model Q550LF for home use,and because of this UEFI, I’m, unable to use it for almost a month now. Any suggestions on how to go about it would be very much appreciated.
Depends on the specifics of what's happening, but I'd reach out to ASUS for assistance.
Thank you so much..
Hi sir I dont know if u still awnser to comments and my question look its happned two times already in my win7 ; when I turn it on, sometimes its gives me a blue screen and up of it is black and its says : gigabyte-uefi DualBIOS then its turns off and again on and shows no screen then this happnes again and finally my pc will load up do u know what's my pc problem???
Too difficult to say. Could be many things. I'd start by reaching out to the support offered by your computer's manufacturer.
If i keep it as what it is will it die?
@@wtgsoap8426 There's no way to know. It certainly possible that it's a sign of something about to die, but it's also possible that it's something else.
I'm sooo sorry I know I talked alot but is there any common thing can happen like that?or any fixing way;One of my friends says if I format my drive c and inestall a new windows its will be fixed can it be true?
@@wtgsoap8426 There's simply no way to know.
Brilliant sir,
I'lllet you know how MY little 2-year struggle with a BIOS-LOCKED toshiba laptop turns out. I've recently thought up a new plan. I ain't giving up on it, it's too good of a computer to let go to waist in the LAPTOP GRAVEYARD I've got stored under my bed~
As I see it, for most people it makes no difference.for some conservative users it's great.but I'm in the part of people who suffer from that.
They screw up almost all Linux users.
Hehe the title rhymes.
Yeah
Windows just hates Linux.
UEFI should be a choice. Don’t take over my computer. Don’t answer questions for me. You don’t know me. It’s just another control of my life. BS My 3 cents. 👏🏾🇺🇸😎
It is a choice. Look for "legacy boot" or similar options in the UEFI settings.
@@askleonotenboom and hope you have not locked yourself out of it.
@@askleonotenboom no ... my laptop dont have that option ...
That is Nonsense