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Phoenix os uefi
Phoenix os uefi










phoenix os uefi

I created a new partition in the disk partition manager, and booted the USB into the installer. To make space, I backed up my recovery partition to my external hard drive and deleted it using Diskpart. It booted perfectly from the USB drive, so I installed it to my SD card…and couldn’t get it to boot from there.

phoenix os uefi

Then I tried Android x86 – the CM13.1 version.

Phoenix os uefi install#

I could get the USB drive to boot, but the install menu wouldn’t respond to touch or click input, so I scrapped that idea. As far as I can tell, it’s got 32-bit Windows installed over a 64-bit UEFI, leading to all sorts of confused forum posts across the Internet.įirst, I attempted to use Cloudready to convert it into a ChromeBook, or a ChromiumBook as the case may be. It’s a year or so older than the one my dad has, though I’m not sure the exact release year. It’s got a MicroSD slot that I’ve stuck a 32GB card into. It’s the 10″ model, with 32GB of storage, 2GB of RAM, and an Intel Atom processor of some kind. While waiting for various files to copy, I started on the other machine I have lying around – my ASUS T100 Transformer Book. At this point, I’m still deciding between messing around with superuser commands, or wiping it and trying something else. This was more stable but much heavier, and I still had Steam client crashes. Then, discovering incompatibilities that made my screen flicker, I overwrote it with Ubuntu Gamepack. First it was my old semi-functional laptop, where I installed SteamOS – via ISO, because the suggested installer wouldn’t work with my legacy BIOS. Instead of doing something more productive over the long weekend, I spent Saturday through Monday running around my house installing Linux on things.












Phoenix os uefi