![]() The option is provided as a fallback, but your system will boot faster in pure UEFI mode. In case your Linux distro of choice only offers a non-UEFI installation, it can often be easily made UEFI capable by downloading the ISO and using Rufus (or a similar utility) to write it to a USB stick in UEFI/MBR compatibility mode.īe advised that using an UEFI system in Legacy or CSM mode is not recommended. (These can be 32-bit only or use a V2 kernel and that won't work with a regular UEFI BIOS.) Any reasonably modern Linux supports it, except some specialist distros designed to give elderly computers a second life. If it really isn't there at all (which wouldn't surprise me for an Acer computer as they are really focused on the low-cost Windows-only market) you will have to install the Linux in UEFI mode, but that shouldn't be a problem at all. ![]() ![]() ![]() In some BIOS settings (and if I recall correctly that was the case in several Acer Aspire models I have seen) the option was there under a different name: It was listed as an option to UEFI under the name CSM. ![]()
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