"booted from a Ventoy key – which tries BIOS boot first – and updated one of the installed OSes. "
What did you do ?? You must have some how nuked EFI Grub with BIOS Grub ?
The Fedora Project has changed its collective mind, and Fedora 37 won't require UEFI – it will still install and run on BIOS-only systems. Last month we reported on some simplifications planned for Fedora 36 and 37. Aside from the changes to console graphics support, there was a proposal to require UEFI firmware, as a step …
You need to be careful when you select the Ugly Extra Firmware Idiot startup...
I saw a local issue when a server administrator was told that the server needed to be rebooted and thought that he was using the UEFI - the reboot then reinstalled the RAID configuration on the two system disks ... but before he selected UEFI the system had been running one disk and using the other as the server backup.
Tilde is absolutely belting and roughly 15 years too late. Also I keep forgetting the name of the bloody thing.
I have rather a lot of Windows sysadmins that I'd like to do some Linux sysadmining that would benefit from tilde ... but what a rubbish name! I'm getting on a bit now and whilst I can recall what the Queen had for dinner in 1977, I have no idea whether I've eaten lunch today or even what lunch is.
No, not that, that's on Tuesday.
Am I hopelessly out of the loop or did The Register get these reversed? Yes, Fedora leads RedHat, but it's still RedHat's upstream, open source distro.
"Fedora is a relatively cutting-edge distro which prides itself on incorporating the latest Linux technology, and that also means proactively removing support for older technologies.
Contrast this with, for instance, Debian – which is generally very technologically conservative – or Ubuntu, which has a cycle of long-term supported releases and more experimental short-lived ones."
I already suggested this was a bad idea since there are loads of old servers still using BIOS and this would effectively require them to uninstall Debian and move towards another Linux distro. The only thing that would happen is Debian losing market share and many distro's based on it (Ubuntu and Linux Mint) jumping ship.
They'd save themselves a few pennies in maintenance at the cost of becoming irrelevant.
For me honestly I think the world should completely dump legacy BIOS, even in virtualization.. there is no need to use a firmware that can't communicate to OS, can't understand disk's partition scheme or force any security polices compared to UEFI, can't do anything other than POST processes and only executing a bootstrap code exist in limited space on MBR that run other bootloader stages later.. multibooting for example should no longer be depend on choosing a multi-boot supported bootloader that would break easily if other OS Installer overwritten it's code on MBR.. in UEFI multibooting completely depends on the firmware itself which makes you directly browse your file systems choosing the EFI compatible bootloader you want and without any data written freely before or between partitions which is pretty clean, well organized way and quite stable compared to old booting way.. a world where technology is developing really fast, old technology shouldn't be supported for a very long time, if that's the case then having a legacy version of distros which customized especially for old hardware and work well for BIOS is a good way as the OSes and PCs will keep developing in a way that make using BIOS impossible in the future..