On Dec 26, 2011, at 5:55 PM, Todd V Orvieto wrote:

> Chris,
>  I got really frustrated with triple boot on Max OS X Lion.  At one point I 
> had it working on snow leopard pretty well.

A possible problem with Lion is not technically with Lion itself. When 10.7 is 
installed, there is an additional partition created called Recovery HD, which 
contains a minimal system for booting a limited environment. Because of this, 
out of the gate you have at least three partitions: sda1, sda2, sda3. You can 
only add one more partition and have parity with a hybrid MBR and I'll bet 
gptsync does this incorrectly. And there are also 2.2TB concerns because of 
course the Windows partition can't go beyond the 2.2TB limit. So how the MBR 
should look in a triple boot, is unique. I've done probably 2-3 dozen installs 
and figured out one that's ideal for less than 2.2TB disks, and one or two that 
are tolerable, but still gross lies, for 2.2TB+ drives.

It also requires giving up on the Windows bootloader and use GRUB2 for 
bootloading both Windows and Fedora.

> My buddy who works for Apple has told me that the installation of refit voids 
> the warranty and they have refused to fix computers under warranty with refit 
> installed.

Well that's completely bogus. I've heard this myth before, I don't know where 
it started. I think some traveling support crew probably were misinformed that 
rEFIt is an EFI firmware replacement, and if it were true that people were 
flashing Apple's firmware with some 3rd party firmware, they'd be able to void 
warranties. But rEFIt is not firmware, it's a set of EFI applications and 
drivers. So whoever says this is completely full of crap and doesn't know what 
they're talking about.


>  I think this is bummer because the Apple hardware is good, it makes no sense 
> why Apple cares.

Apple doesn't care to support foreign OS's.


Chris Murphy
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