




upcycler wrote:Thank you, the Boot Option Menu gives me a choice of
USB Hard Drive (UEFI)
OS boot Manager
linuxmint (Hitachi HT...)
Boot from EFI file
I chose the linuxmint option and it booted me into Windows 8.
Which should I have chosen?

upcycler wrote:upcycler wrote:Thank you, the Boot Option Menu gives me a choice of
USB Hard Drive (UEFI)
OS boot Manager
linuxmint (Hitachi HT...)
Boot from EFI file
I chose the linuxmint option and it booted me into Windows 8.
Which should I have chosen?
I removed the USB drive and then tried both of the other options. Both just booted me into Windows 8.
How do I boot Mint? Or should I delete and begin again?



Can I download it *before* installing Mint? How does that work?




upcycler wrote:Thanks, but the Mint install seems to have killed the modem. It no longer works in either MInt or in Win8. I guess I have to give up.

bb333 wrote:Turn it back on in the BIOS. It should be a setting. There are function keys on your keyboard to do the same (Fn+wireless icon labeled key).

bb333 wrote:Try repairing it first. Use the boot-repair mentioned here with the Ubuntu-Secure-Remix livecd/liveusb:
http://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEFI#I ... _and_Error

upcycler wrote:Thank you for the reference but I cannot use it as I cannot get online to download the Boot Repair program. Apparently there is no driver for my modem but there is no way to install the driver because I cannot get online to download the driver. Catch-22.bb333 wrote:Try repairing it first. Use the boot-repair mentioned here with the Ubuntu-Secure-Remix livecd/liveusb:
http://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEFI#I ... _and_Error
$ lspci$ inxi -N

sudo find /mnt -iname "*.efi"

upcycler wrote:inxi -N shows
Network: Card-1: Ralink Device 3290
Card-2: Realtek RTL801E/RTL8102E PCI Express Fast Ethernet controller
driver: r8169

bb333 wrote:[Now for fun with proprietary wireless drivers

srs5694 wrote:Ordinarily, a Linux installation shouldn't affect your ability to use hardware in any other OS on your computer. The Linux installer shouldn't be touching files in the Windows partition. The installer will resize the Windows partition, though, and I suppose it's conceivable that it's doing some damage to the filesystem in the process. A more likely explanation, though, is that the Mint installer is doing something to the boot loader configuration that's interfering with a computer-specific boot loader that's doing some hardware initialization. If the Mint installer removes that hypothetical tool from the boot path, then the OS drivers might not be able to use the hardware.

upcycler wrote:Yes, thank you, I found those, but with no internet access when I am in Linux, how would I download the needed driver? I have no access to another Linux machine (if I did I wouldn't be struggling with this!) For the same reason, no access to the internet, I cannot download the boot repair software either.
upcycler wrote:Although the only things I changed in the BIOS were the boot order and the secure boot, the only way to restore internet access to Win 8 is to go into the BIOS and under the Exit menu select "Load Setup defaults (Load default values for all SETUP items.)" I can't find a list of exactly what it is resetting, but afterwards (1.)the wireless (Ralink RT3290) works again in Win8 and (2.)Mint14 is no longer bootable. I hope this information is useful to someone.

Users browsing this forum: Distro-Don, passerby and 34 guests