I had the same issue with Leap 42.1 on an ASUS Ultrabook. The problem was that Windows 10 does not shut down "completely", so the filesystems are left in an intermediate step. I suspect that it has to do with some fast boot technology or the other. If you press the shift key while selecting shutdown on Windows 10, it will shut down completely and properly, and Leap should boot fine. Good luck!!! Pablo Dotro On 02/07/17 10:21, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Richmond
[02-07-17 08:13]: jdd wrote:
Le 06/02/2017 à 22:40, Anthony Youngman a écrit :
Leap 42.2? Gentoo? I'm sure *they're* UEFI compliant :-) Unfortunately, new computers cost a lot more than new distros, UEFI is around 10 years old, now, so most old computer should be compliant now.
Have you done a survey? I have three 64 bit computers without UEFI, and four 32 bit computers, three of which have floppy disk drives. my desktop is an intel i7 970 build in 2010 which has UEFI available but not being used.
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