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Vista not to support EFI

Hurmoth   on 10 March 2006 - 03:00 · 181 comments & 82081 views

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On Thursday, at the Intel Developer Forum in San Fransisco, Microsoft development manager Andrew Ritz revealed that Windows Vista, the successor to the aging Windows XP expected to be released later this year, will not support EFI booting. Ritz admitted that EFI support will not be seen until Longhorn Server is released in early 2007, and on top of that it will never support a 32-bit processor.

Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) is the modern and flexible successor to the 20-year-old PC BIOS. It is responsible for initialising hardware in the PC, and importantly, device drivers are stored in the EFI flash memory rather than being loaded by the operating system.

This is terrible news for Intel Mac users who have been hoping that they could dual-boot Windows and Mac OS X on their new Macs: not only are their processors not 64-bit (and thus will never be supported by Windows EFI booting) but Windows Vista won't boot on EFI anyway.

"A combination of factors changed our plans. The big one, in my opinion was platform availability. With this huge move to 64-bit based platforms and for us to support it, we needed to see a large heterogeneous sample of 64 bit implementations out there for us to feel comfortable in supporting it." said Ritz.

View: apcmag.com
View: Neowin Forum Discussion




Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 181 additional comments
(1 reply) #1 on 01 Jan 1970 - 00:00
#1.1 shockz on 10 Mar 2006 - 06:02
Play games that only work on Windows maybe??? Then the rest of the time use a mac?
(2 replies) #2 on 01 Jan 1970 - 00:00
#2.1 Simon on 10 Mar 2006 - 08:54
I already did that, now I'm stuck with OS X

Hurry along Linux!
#2.2 Simon on 10 Mar 2006 - 13:57
:p yes it's booting, but it's a pain to actually install it. I want a nice clicky clicky install
#3 vetmalebolgia on 10 Mar 2006 - 16:28
The real question is whether or not the industry will fully adopt EFI. You can argue that it’s Microsoft’s fault for slowing down the process, which seems to be the common thing to do. Especially from folks who want to run some version of Windows on their Intel Macs.

In part I’ll agree that Microsoft’s announcement to not support EFI on 32-bit chips will probably slow down the adoption. However, wasting time and money to develop support for a slowly decaying market (32-bit) doesn’t make sense.

Last edited by malebolgia on 10 Mar 2006 - 16:44

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