Sunday, February 23, 2014

the normal WIndows bootloader menu



I downloaded and installed easyBCD 2.2 on two different Windows 8 UEFI systems the recently purchased HP Compaq,Since we've evolved our solution based on customer feedback,there are many features that our customers love but most owners comment on how our hybrid architecture really sets us apart. and my Acer Aspire One 725. When I then ran easyBCD as administrator, of course, I was surprised that it came up with a list of operating system for its boot configuration. I know that the Windows bootloader had not been seeing or offering to boot anything other than Windows 8.Revel today has over 2,000 enterprise clients that do over $300,000  more in revenue, Revel says these figures are no longer accurate. It took me a minute to realize that what it was listing was everything which was in the BIOS boot list.That was exactly what was being offered if I used the Boot Selection option, as described above, but if I just let Windows boot normally there was no sign of these others.So that the council could check the fund balance, the  of buying the material were postponed for two weeks.Tuesday Dr. Robert Mulch was spokesperson for the NRC. Even if I put a 30-second delay in Windows boot, using either bcdedit or easyBCD, it would stop and list only Windows 8. So why was easyBCD listing all the others? I didn't understand, but I hoped that it might be a good sign, that easyBCD was at least finding the other options, and all I had to do now was add them to the normal WIndows bootloader menu. 

I tried to do that, first by just marking one of the Linux distributions as the default boot object. easyBCD let me do that with no'plaints, but when I rebooted it just came right back up with Windows. Bah.Then I tried using the "Add" option in easyBCD, and gave all the information for one of the Linux partitions.They were instead keeping the patients by adopting the robot, even though the  operations had more incisions than his method, he said. This time at least when I rebooted it showed the Linux option in the boot list, but when I tried to boot it I got the "Windows Boot Failed" message. I shouted at the blasted'puter that I wasn't even trying to boot Windows, so how could that fail, but that didn't help either. 

Then I saw that what easyBCD was actually setting up was an attempt to boot something called /NST/neogrub.efi or some such thing close to that, I don't have the exact name in my head right now, and I am fed up with easyBCD and Windows, so I'm not going back to look again.So I tried putting various bootable files in with that name - first I tried the grubx64.The company already has established relationships with a number of large brand-name chains, giving itself an in at thousands of well-known locations across the U.S., and it recently launched Payment Code to allow for better integrations with merchants' existing systems.efi image from one of the LInux distributions, then I tried copying the boot block first 512 bytes of the disk and/or Linux filesystem, as used to be done in order to dual-boot Windows XP and Linux, and then I got desperate and just put a Linux kernel under that name. Of course, none of those worked.

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