On May 27, 2013, at 8:02 AM, King Beowulf <[email protected]> wrote:

> I find that hard to believe. Every computer mother board has some sort
> of BIOS, EFI or not.

BIOS is defined as the antiquated IO systems for PCs. EFI is a replacement, and 
not technically BIOS. According to the link below, EFI is just a software 
interface between the OS and the Firmware of a computer. It appears that you 
are calling EFI "BIOS" which it isn't.

There is no BIOS on my computer, as in, no keystroke to 'enter' BIOS and make 
changes to the settings. There's nothing to configure in a true (U)EFI based 
computer. There is a keystroke to cause the system to boot from the optical 
drive, USB or network. There is a keystroke to force the EFI to scan the 
system, and configure itself. 

But the human on the meatspace side of the keyboard can't make any manual 
changes. 

This is also why my computer does not support a floppy, unless it's attached to 
the USB port. Then it looks like just another thumb drive. No reason to clog up 
the works with a slow floppy interface. 

http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/architecture-and-technology/unified-extensible-firmware-interface/efi-homepage-general-technology.html

Russell Johnson
[email protected]



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