On 1/25/2018 4:59 PM, Greg Rundlett (freephile) wrote: > It didn't actually overwrite the Windows EFI boot partition (FAT32) - I > think because it's protected / smart enough not to let me shoot myself in > the foot.
A nit-pick: there is no such thing as a "Windows EFI boot partition". Windows uses NTFS for its boot manager partition. The EFI System partition is part of the EFI or UEFI firmware, independent of any and every OS on the system. It's usually FAT32 because FAT32 is a minimum requirement of the UEFI specifications. Anyway, don't touch the EFI System unless you know exactly what you are doing. Bad things can happen if it isn't exactly to EFI specs. -- Rich P. _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
