EFI is already used by Apple, and if you want to dual-boot one with
Linux (or that other major OS) then you have to download & install
REFIt, which acts like a bootloader & gives you the options to boot into
an OS, from a CD or flash drive, or go into a shell, use the disk
partitioner, get the "about" info, or restart/shutdown the computer.

Jim Peterson
Technology Coordinator
Goodnight Memorial Library
203 S. Main St.
Franklin, KY  42134
(270) 586-8397
www.gmpl.org
Tweet me @GMLGeek
Library Technology Blog
I'm on Facebook, too! 

On Wed, 2010-06-09 at 07:19 -0500, Sabuj Pattanayek wrote:
> grub2 supports efi . I don't think grub 1 does. This is one of things
> I noticed when I was playing with gentoo on itanium (one of the first
> architectures to incorporate efi). Isn't efi supposed to replace the
> bios eventually?
> 

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