I’ve turned off Secure Boot a little while ago because enrolling keys is annoying at best, so it shouldn’t matter much, but the AMD improvements that are bundled in here make it important.

I suppose I’ll see if I can get Fedora to boot through Secure Boot after all this.

6 points

I’m not familiar with the issue in this update, is secure boot enforced now?

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2 points

It’s not enforced, but I kept it on and was using Fedora until I turned it off recently since they support it. If I turn it back on, good chance Secure Boot will complain when booting into Linux.

I think this is the issue here

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3 points

Debian supports secure boot OOTB.

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2 points

Killed my Windows VM too.

Good thing it’s well constrained there.

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1 point

Windows killed Windows? Oh the irony!

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2 points

Well, it’s one of Windows favorite hobbies…

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2 points

I just repaired a windows 10 laptop of an acquaintance that wouldn’t boot. Turns out the windows boot manager partition was nowhere to be seen in the boot list of the BIOS. Who knows what really happened but I arrived to the conclusion that the windows update fucked his laptop.

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2 points

Update your Linux distros, boot to another drive, give up windows… The choice is yours

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2 points

Just turning off secure boot and giving Linux its own drive. Much better this way!

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