Jumping to Conclusions on BIOS, Phoenix, and Windows 107
tomlasusa writes "In a post on LinuxQuestions.org, user 'chessonly' cites a 2003 article from Networkcomputing.com by writer Steven J. Schuchart as evidence of that Phoenix Technologies has made its BIOS more Windows-friendly — thereby locking out users from using other OSs. In a rebuttal posted at nwc.com, Schuchart says that this is just not true."
I have an idea that I can make money on (Score:4, Funny)
I need Slashdotter's opinion on this: what do you think of a "jump to conclusions" mat? I could make millions!
Re:I have an idea that I can make money on (Score:5, Funny)
A "Jump to delusions" mat would make a lot more money, especially here.
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Yes, this is horrible, this idea.
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Then sitting in a wheelchair with almost every visible part of his body in a cast of some sorts, he tell an ex-coworker that he now has time to work on his baby, the jump to conclusions mat because he made a fortune off the accident settlement.
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Hmm.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Which, of course, is utter bullshit. Slashdot does that all the time.
This story was posted only to take a shot at Digg. It's otherwise completely non-newsworthy, something I can't say about Digg's current stories.
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Eh, I think if this had been posted to Slashdot then the users (not all of them, of course, but enough) would have called it out. I mean, it's an article from 2003 so it's pretty easy to prove false.
On a side note, I think a lot of Slashdotters go to both Digg and Slashdot (I do). The difference is though that I use Slashdot for the summary and discussion (article if it's interesting enough), whereas the summary and discussion on Digg tend to be pretty crappy, but some times I can find a link to an interes
Gogo Shepherd Book! (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Gogo Shepherd Book! (Score:4, Funny)
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Spazamataz? (Score:4, Insightful)
Hardware development isn't going to stop just because 4 out of 5 kernel devs agree to release a driver as stable.
I think the programmer side of the community is flexible enough to deal with hardware changes, and it's just that annoying end-user whining because he wants hardware X to work today, and the fact that he doesnt have it proves some world conspiracy against him.
Re:Spazamataz? (Score:5, Informative)
And yeah Microsoft does have various conspiracies against linux. See the recent news on Bill Gates asking how to make an open ACPI spec that would be difficult for linux to implement.
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The rest of your points are just overblown and silly. There are plenty of reasons to dislike Microsoft and their tactics, but saying that everyone in the community hates them is too strong. Same thing for the rest of your post.
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What is kind of funny, because ACPI on Windows is so bloody HARD to use nowadays, while on Linux you can use it even from the command line :) (But I get that the point was to make it hard for the kernel developers.)
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My Toshiba Satellite Pro was the ONLY laptop I've ever owned that couldn't boot a 2.88 MB boot image
bootable CD. Haven't used Toshiba since then but I hope that's one issue they've fixed.
If hardware specifications would be open.. (Score:1)
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strings
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strings
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http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/showthread
Hover over the double underlined link to security in the second blockquote and the text goes all fubar so you can't read it anymore. Works fine in IE and Firefox.
Oh noes! it must be a conspiracy against the superior but less popular Opera browser by those Firefox bastards.
Or it could just be th
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That's a huge advantage to the mostly closed-box principle.
Jumping to conclutions is human nature (Score:5, Interesting)
Jumping to conclutions is human nature because (Score:1)
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What are the facts of the case? (Score:3, Interesting)
But what of the purported fact that the guy cannot get another OS on there? An effective rebuttal would include a good explanation why this problem occured; even better if it discussed a work-around or a fix.
Phoenix can claim they aren't [intentionally] doing this, but is it really happening in effect whether intentional or not? If it is, what is their response? If it isn't, who is this guy making this claim and what is he doing wrong?
Does anyone here have such a laptop? Would you care to install Linux on it as a test? Has anyone here tried? Did it work?
What are the facts? Can any of this be confirmed?
Re:What are the facts of the case? (Score:5, Informative)
From what I can tell, there's a bug with the user's laptop and some "USB-to-serial thing" according to his forum post [linuxquestions.org]. Whatever it did, it managed to get the BIOS to set a password. The user decides this is because they installed Linux, and the BIOS is "only for Windows Vista" and therefore locks out non-Windows OSes.
He then links to another post [notebookreview.com] as "proof" which you'll not never mentions any non-Windows OS. My guess is that it's the "USB-to-serial thing" that's causing some bug in the BIOS that corrupts parts of the CMOS, causing a password to be set. (As an added bonus, if it's truly random data, it could be an untypable password.)
So, nothing to do with running Linux, and everything to do with the "USB-to-serial" thing that the user used. At least, that's my guess.
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Ok, yes, there is a slight chance that someone else reading
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with a Phoenix BIOS.
There is no capability in the BIOS to boot off of the second hard drive;
fortunately GRUB on openSuSE 10.2 knows how to scribble itself in to the
MBR on the primary drive, and permit me to boot either Linux or Windows.
However, even despite setting the appropriate items in the BIOS, I'm having
a VERY difficult time booting off of an external USB(2.0) Western Digital "Book"
drive. I can get to a GRUB> prompt, but it wo
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This guy probably was screwing around and set his BIOS password, or one of his friends was screwing around and did it, and now he's trying to setup some gigantic conspiracy theory.
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There's absolutely no way a bug could possibly set the BIOS password. The GP poster is a complete idiot.
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What'd be effective is to verify the purported fact first - the guy hasn't taken it in for servicing. The Phoenix guys do not have any information on the problem from the blog post and you want them to duplicate it, and figure out what is going wrong. Come on. If its a BIOS password a work-around or a
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I saw a submission about this yesterday in Firehose, and after going three links deep, I still couldn't figure out WTF was really going on. So I voted it down.
My best guess is that something (maybe even a bug in Toshiba's build of his BIOS) caused a password to be set, then the guy went all Chicken Little about "Teh Evel Micro$ofts" and "Darth Gate$". Nowhere could I find any hard evidence that it was something intentional in the design of the BIOS.
For a while I thought it might have had something to do wit
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I doubt this guy is Psychic, and able to determine the cause of a reported problem, based on a couple lines of whining complaints on a blog...
Since there is precisely ONE person, ANYWHERE, claiming this problem exists, it's quite safe to assume it's not actu
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My friend Bob has the same problem. So what do you say to that, MS Fudboy?
Well, that was a waste of time (Score:5, Informative)
The article basically says "a post made by a clueless chap on a forum is almost certainly conplete twaddle. I wouldn't have even written this but his post quotes me."
So, IOW: the article is one big "nothing happened"
How is this news?
The problem is that nothing happened. (Score:2)
the article is one big "nothing happened"
and the guy still has a broken laptop. What I get out of that is avoid Toshiba.
Only someone with their head firmly buried could think there is nothing wrong with BIOS. They are not free and the companies that make them work closely with M$, a company famous for sabotaging their competitors. This makes all new equipment a crap shoot. The author may have pussed out of his original sentiment, but things have not changed at all since he wrote the article:
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"It is directly against Phoenix's policy to create BIOS that would lock customers into any single OS. It has never been or will it ever be Phoenix's intention to lock a customer into a particular OS." Gaurav Banga, CTO & SVP of Engineering at Phoenix Technologies Ltd.
In addition, Phoenix is working with the Consumer Electronics Linux Forum (CELF) and is the leader of the Boot Technology Working Group within CELF. Gaurav Banga also tells me that the BTWG is Phoenix's first effort in with the open source community and that they plan more involvement with mainstream desktop and server Linux efforts.
Honestly, you're a complete idiot. There's no other explanation any more.
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Hmmm, well there could just be a reason for that.
I am no BIOS expert or anything like that, but it seems to me from a logical POV that Windows, *nix, or any other OS would have to rely on the state of the machine when comming back from hibernation. If the BIOS allowed you to boot into another OS while a different OS was in a hibernated state, when you attempt to bring the hibernated OS back in, then the machine state would be quite different then when it went into hibernation. It would seem to me that t
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Since i installed grub i can actually choose to load another OS(ubuntu)in the same drive and boot it. What just annoys me is i can't boot a usb pen or a cd.
As far the windows partitions i can read files as long i don't do any alterations to that partition, since it is in a inconsistent state.
The weird is that i looked at others laptops(non Toshiba) and they don't have this behavior.
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Re:Toshiba :( (Score:4, Insightful)
I've fixed 300Mhz old Dell laptops using freely available service manuals with detailed assembly and disassembly instructions from their support.dell.com site.
But it's good Toshiba does it too.
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dugg down (Score:1, Offtopic)
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my take (Score:2)
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So what...? (Score:2, Funny)
It sure isn't the official-Journalism-portal.
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there is a precedent .. (Score:4, Informative)
It seems unfortunate if we do this work and get our partners to do the work and the results is that Linux works great without having to do the work
Maybe there is no way to avoid this problem but it does bother me.
Maybe we could define the APIs so that they work well with NT and not the others even if they are open.
Or maybe we could patent something related to this.
http://edge-op.org/iowa/www.iowaconsumercase.org/
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If they fix a significant technical problem, they should get a patent to preserve at least some competitive advantage. Maybe 15 years is too long, but some force-of-law to encourage people to solve problems and tell everyone how they did it is a good thing.
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I don't know if you read the same email but it seems patently clear that what was being proposed was breaking ACPI to make it Windows specific and use patents to prevent it being used on Linux. And since Linux is GPL it could not use patented ACPI extensions. Using broken extensions to preserve 'competitive advantage' is the act of a paranoid, greedy, untrustworthy and petty organization [synthesist.net]
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and IF it's non-obvious to one skilled in the art
and IF it's truly novel, as opposed to simple combination of existing art
THEN maybe it's patentable.
There's far too many patents of the kind, "Here's a solution to a problem that I happened to think of first. Once you think of the problem, the solution is obvious, but since I thought of the problem first, I deserve a patent on it."
Not to be stupid but... (Score:1)
Bah! (Score:4, Insightful)
They are just covering thier own backs that on the slight chance that the data changes in the ACPI could cause some crap on other OS'es. The user probably set a password, or corrputed his BIOS during the flash phase, and is pointing fingers at anyone else so he no longer looks like a dumbass.
I get this all the time with people who bring thier CellPhones in for repair becuase they locked thier phones and forgot thier password. They state clearly that they never changed it, and when I load the phone into my PST's and retreive the code the look of realization comes over them and say, "oh yeah, I remember it now"
More Windows-friendly (Score:2)
If they choose to support 90% of the market, well, thats their choice. Its our choice not to use their products ( if that bothers you )
Where's the leap? (Score:1)
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