Zozano, 1 year ago Bootloaders don’t interact with the UEFI, the UEFI interacts with the bootloader. Sounds like you just used a bad one. systemd-boot is superb, it autodetects all kernals and shows an option to access the UEFI. Windows however, assumes it owns your boot partition, so likes to delete Linux bootloaders if installed last.
Bootloaders don’t interact with the UEFI, the UEFI interacts with the bootloader.
Sounds like you just used a bad one. systemd-boot is superb, it autodetects all kernals and shows an option to access the UEFI.
Windows however, assumes it owns your boot partition, so likes to delete Linux bootloaders if installed last.