If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ. You will have to register
before you can post. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
If you have copied text output that contains formatting (colors, highlighting, etc.), please do not enclose it in QUOTE or CODE tags. Just right-click your mouse and choose "Paste Without Formatting" or similar (Paste as plain text).
You cannot disable UEFI -- this is the kind of firmware your computer has been built with. You can enable a legacy mode (which you mention in the subject line). To do this, boot into the firmware's menus and look for "BIOS compatibility mode" or "CSM" (which means "compatibility service module").
Are you sure, though, that your installation problems are related to UEFI?
You cannot disable UEFI -- this is the kind of firmware your computer has been built with. You can enable a legacy mode (which you mention in the subject line). To do this, boot into the firmware's menus and look for "BIOS compatibility mode" or "CSM" (which means "compatibility service module").
Are you sure, though, that your installation problems are related to UEFI?
Secure boot Can be the problem?
The installation disc is still running, but "something" I turned off the screen and not let me see the process.
Secure Boot is not the same thing as UEFI. Secure Boot is a UEFI feature, which you can disable -- in fact, I recommend that you do. You'll need to boot into the firmware's menu to do this.
A black screen during boot can be caused by any number of problems. A detailed thread on the Ubuntu forum has some relevant troubleshooting and workaround ideas.
Comment