Joseph Comfort írta:
The first thread got off track. I need a new one.
[SNIP] These new BIOS systems may behave very strange. For example I have a computer that supports UEFI. It had an brand new hard disk with nothing installed on it. When I inserted openSUSE 13.1 install DVD the system has not recognized it at all. Gave error message that did not find anything bootable. When I inserted openSUSE 13.2 install DVD the system recognized it and the DVD menu appeared. The system also recognized "Ultimate Boot CD" (a CD with different programs). After this I inserted openSUSE 13.1 DVD again, and the system recognized it this time. Then I disconnected the hard disk - (unplugged the SATA cable), reconnected it (plugged int the cable) and the story started over again - oS 13.1 DVD was not recognized etc. Back to your issue: First, I am not sure that you can disable UEFI. For example in case of my motherboard, I cannot disable UEFI, but can enable legacy suport. I don't have experience with UEFI motherboards, but I think on some mothernopards you can switch between UEFI/legacy mode, on other board you cannot disable UEFI. Second, this is what I'd do: Install oS 13.2 as it goes. Then boot into oS 13.2. Use cfdisk or fdisk to check the partitions on /dev/sda and /dev/sdb. Reinstall the boot loader after editing the necessary files - either use grub legacy or grub2. Grub legacy is easier I'd try that one first. In the /boot/grub/menu.lst file you have to add Windows-7 section by chainloading. Here you can find a howto on setting up grub and grub2: http://www.dedoimedo.com/computers/grub.html http://www.dedoimedo.com/computers/grub-2.html Istvan -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org