![]() ![]() At the end, you’ll have the benefits of UEFI security but also know how to bypass its drawbacks. This article will show how to fully master the UEFI boot system on Vista, Windows 7, and Windows 8 systems. Windows 8’s tight integration with a PC’s UEFI can be especially problematic when you need to run bootable rescue media. Ironically, UEFI can also block important repair, recovery, and backup tools that boot from DVDs, CDs, or USB drives. Successor to the antiquated BIOS, the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) adds powerful security tools to post-XP systems. How to solve UEFI boot and startup problems But the Windows 8-specific content here still generally applies to Windows 10. Note: This article appeared when Win10 was in late previews Win10 is not explicitly discussed. The original, verbatim, un-updated text follows. ![]() (I’m reprinting selected Windows Secrets columns here to help ensure readers can find and access information that I’m referencing in new columns until older Windows Secrets/LangaList columns are moved to their new home at .) Today, it supplements a new LangaList column scheduled for the March 25, 2019, AskWoody Plus Newsletter. The column reprinted below was originally published in the December 11, 2014, Windows Secrets newsletter. ![]()
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