W10 prevents Linux access [duplicate]












1















This question already has an answer here:




  • Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot

    4 answers



  • Can't boot into Ubuntu in Windows 10 / Ubuntu dual boot

    4 answers




I am a Linux user - very basic techie..Been using Linux for 16 years. Installed Linux alongside Windows 10 on a new Acer Aspire c24-865.

PC boots straight in Windows ....

Since I cannot access UEFI in this BIOS (version R02-A0),

none of the solutions I have seen so far seem to apply ..

Thanks for your help!!! I tried all other solutions such as this:

Windows 10 Boots Automatically After Installing Ubuntu










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by karel, George Udosen, Thomas, Eric Carvalho, Zanna Dec 27 '18 at 19:39


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.











  • 1




    Boot with your Live USB and install boot-repair to it. Run boot repair and it should set it up to boot to grub where you can select either Windows 10 or Ubuntu from a menu. See: help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Dec 1 '18 at 16:57










  • Tried that with no success... I feel the problem is related to the Acer Bios ... even with a supervisor PW set and secured boot off, I don't get any UEFI options .. cannot change the boot order.. Had I known wouls never had bought this Acer machine
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 2 '18 at 2:30










  • Thanks for your answer... tried that - boot-repair went fine but nothing changed regarding UEFI's sequence... The ACER docum regarding management of UEFI does not apply either to this computer (new model)..
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 3 '18 at 13:28






  • 2




    If you do not have settings in UEFI, you need to update UEFI from Acer. Some old threads mention downgrading, but many newer threads say UEFI update from Acer then offers the option to set "trust" on ubuntu boot entries. Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot, many details Trust settings in step 35 askubuntu.com/questions/627416/… & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2298380
    – oldfred
    Dec 26 '18 at 20:00
















1















This question already has an answer here:




  • Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot

    4 answers



  • Can't boot into Ubuntu in Windows 10 / Ubuntu dual boot

    4 answers




I am a Linux user - very basic techie..Been using Linux for 16 years. Installed Linux alongside Windows 10 on a new Acer Aspire c24-865.

PC boots straight in Windows ....

Since I cannot access UEFI in this BIOS (version R02-A0),

none of the solutions I have seen so far seem to apply ..

Thanks for your help!!! I tried all other solutions such as this:

Windows 10 Boots Automatically After Installing Ubuntu










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by karel, George Udosen, Thomas, Eric Carvalho, Zanna Dec 27 '18 at 19:39


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.











  • 1




    Boot with your Live USB and install boot-repair to it. Run boot repair and it should set it up to boot to grub where you can select either Windows 10 or Ubuntu from a menu. See: help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Dec 1 '18 at 16:57










  • Tried that with no success... I feel the problem is related to the Acer Bios ... even with a supervisor PW set and secured boot off, I don't get any UEFI options .. cannot change the boot order.. Had I known wouls never had bought this Acer machine
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 2 '18 at 2:30










  • Thanks for your answer... tried that - boot-repair went fine but nothing changed regarding UEFI's sequence... The ACER docum regarding management of UEFI does not apply either to this computer (new model)..
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 3 '18 at 13:28






  • 2




    If you do not have settings in UEFI, you need to update UEFI from Acer. Some old threads mention downgrading, but many newer threads say UEFI update from Acer then offers the option to set "trust" on ubuntu boot entries. Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot, many details Trust settings in step 35 askubuntu.com/questions/627416/… & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2298380
    – oldfred
    Dec 26 '18 at 20:00














1












1








1


2






This question already has an answer here:




  • Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot

    4 answers



  • Can't boot into Ubuntu in Windows 10 / Ubuntu dual boot

    4 answers




I am a Linux user - very basic techie..Been using Linux for 16 years. Installed Linux alongside Windows 10 on a new Acer Aspire c24-865.

PC boots straight in Windows ....

Since I cannot access UEFI in this BIOS (version R02-A0),

none of the solutions I have seen so far seem to apply ..

Thanks for your help!!! I tried all other solutions such as this:

Windows 10 Boots Automatically After Installing Ubuntu










share|improve this question














This question already has an answer here:




  • Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot

    4 answers



  • Can't boot into Ubuntu in Windows 10 / Ubuntu dual boot

    4 answers




I am a Linux user - very basic techie..Been using Linux for 16 years. Installed Linux alongside Windows 10 on a new Acer Aspire c24-865.

PC boots straight in Windows ....

Since I cannot access UEFI in this BIOS (version R02-A0),

none of the solutions I have seen so far seem to apply ..

Thanks for your help!!! I tried all other solutions such as this:

Windows 10 Boots Automatically After Installing Ubuntu





This question already has an answer here:




  • Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot

    4 answers



  • Can't boot into Ubuntu in Windows 10 / Ubuntu dual boot

    4 answers








dual-boot uefi






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 1 '18 at 15:58









Ray Giguere

61




61




marked as duplicate by karel, George Udosen, Thomas, Eric Carvalho, Zanna Dec 27 '18 at 19:39


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by karel, George Udosen, Thomas, Eric Carvalho, Zanna Dec 27 '18 at 19:39


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    Boot with your Live USB and install boot-repair to it. Run boot repair and it should set it up to boot to grub where you can select either Windows 10 or Ubuntu from a menu. See: help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Dec 1 '18 at 16:57










  • Tried that with no success... I feel the problem is related to the Acer Bios ... even with a supervisor PW set and secured boot off, I don't get any UEFI options .. cannot change the boot order.. Had I known wouls never had bought this Acer machine
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 2 '18 at 2:30










  • Thanks for your answer... tried that - boot-repair went fine but nothing changed regarding UEFI's sequence... The ACER docum regarding management of UEFI does not apply either to this computer (new model)..
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 3 '18 at 13:28






  • 2




    If you do not have settings in UEFI, you need to update UEFI from Acer. Some old threads mention downgrading, but many newer threads say UEFI update from Acer then offers the option to set "trust" on ubuntu boot entries. Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot, many details Trust settings in step 35 askubuntu.com/questions/627416/… & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2298380
    – oldfred
    Dec 26 '18 at 20:00














  • 1




    Boot with your Live USB and install boot-repair to it. Run boot repair and it should set it up to boot to grub where you can select either Windows 10 or Ubuntu from a menu. See: help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Dec 1 '18 at 16:57










  • Tried that with no success... I feel the problem is related to the Acer Bios ... even with a supervisor PW set and secured boot off, I don't get any UEFI options .. cannot change the boot order.. Had I known wouls never had bought this Acer machine
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 2 '18 at 2:30










  • Thanks for your answer... tried that - boot-repair went fine but nothing changed regarding UEFI's sequence... The ACER docum regarding management of UEFI does not apply either to this computer (new model)..
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 3 '18 at 13:28






  • 2




    If you do not have settings in UEFI, you need to update UEFI from Acer. Some old threads mention downgrading, but many newer threads say UEFI update from Acer then offers the option to set "trust" on ubuntu boot entries. Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot, many details Trust settings in step 35 askubuntu.com/questions/627416/… & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2298380
    – oldfred
    Dec 26 '18 at 20:00








1




1




Boot with your Live USB and install boot-repair to it. Run boot repair and it should set it up to boot to grub where you can select either Windows 10 or Ubuntu from a menu. See: help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
Dec 1 '18 at 16:57




Boot with your Live USB and install boot-repair to it. Run boot repair and it should set it up to boot to grub where you can select either Windows 10 or Ubuntu from a menu. See: help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
Dec 1 '18 at 16:57












Tried that with no success... I feel the problem is related to the Acer Bios ... even with a supervisor PW set and secured boot off, I don't get any UEFI options .. cannot change the boot order.. Had I known wouls never had bought this Acer machine
– Ray Giguere
Dec 2 '18 at 2:30




Tried that with no success... I feel the problem is related to the Acer Bios ... even with a supervisor PW set and secured boot off, I don't get any UEFI options .. cannot change the boot order.. Had I known wouls never had bought this Acer machine
– Ray Giguere
Dec 2 '18 at 2:30












Thanks for your answer... tried that - boot-repair went fine but nothing changed regarding UEFI's sequence... The ACER docum regarding management of UEFI does not apply either to this computer (new model)..
– Ray Giguere
Dec 3 '18 at 13:28




Thanks for your answer... tried that - boot-repair went fine but nothing changed regarding UEFI's sequence... The ACER docum regarding management of UEFI does not apply either to this computer (new model)..
– Ray Giguere
Dec 3 '18 at 13:28




2




2




If you do not have settings in UEFI, you need to update UEFI from Acer. Some old threads mention downgrading, but many newer threads say UEFI update from Acer then offers the option to set "trust" on ubuntu boot entries. Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot, many details Trust settings in step 35 askubuntu.com/questions/627416/… & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2298380
– oldfred
Dec 26 '18 at 20:00




If you do not have settings in UEFI, you need to update UEFI from Acer. Some old threads mention downgrading, but many newer threads say UEFI update from Acer then offers the option to set "trust" on ubuntu boot entries. Acer Aspire E15 will not dual boot, many details Trust settings in step 35 askubuntu.com/questions/627416/… & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2298380
– oldfred
Dec 26 '18 at 20:00










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














I had same problem on my Aspire C24-865.
Tried boot-repair, with same results although noticed that the error report said 'try the following in Win10'




  1. Run Command.com as Admin.



  2. Enter following instruction:



    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi


  3. Re-start computer.



That worked for me. Grub menu now loads to give the expected OS choices.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


















  • Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:22










  • Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday



















0














Accessing UEFI from Windows 10 on an Acer can be a bit convoluted. If the links provided by my peers in their comments don't resolve your issue, and you can't access the UEFI settings by hitting F2 or Del when the logo screen appears at power on, boot into Windows 10 and then




  • Click the Start Start menu and select Settings..

  • Click Update & security.

  • Click Update and recovery.

  • Select Recovery from the left column, then

  • Click Restart now.

  • Once boot menu appears, select Troubleshoot.

  • In Troubleshoot menu, select Advanced options.

  • In Advanced options menu, click UEFI Firmware Settings.

  • Click Restart. The system will restart and enter UEFI (BIOS).


Source: https://us.answers.acer.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/27103/






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:30










  • @RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
    – Elder Geek
    Dec 29 '18 at 17:40










  • Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday










  • @RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
    – Elder Geek
    1 hour ago


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














I had same problem on my Aspire C24-865.
Tried boot-repair, with same results although noticed that the error report said 'try the following in Win10'




  1. Run Command.com as Admin.



  2. Enter following instruction:



    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi


  3. Re-start computer.



That worked for me. Grub menu now loads to give the expected OS choices.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


















  • Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:22










  • Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday
















0














I had same problem on my Aspire C24-865.
Tried boot-repair, with same results although noticed that the error report said 'try the following in Win10'




  1. Run Command.com as Admin.



  2. Enter following instruction:



    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi


  3. Re-start computer.



That worked for me. Grub menu now loads to give the expected OS choices.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


















  • Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:22










  • Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday














0












0








0






I had same problem on my Aspire C24-865.
Tried boot-repair, with same results although noticed that the error report said 'try the following in Win10'




  1. Run Command.com as Admin.



  2. Enter following instruction:



    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi


  3. Re-start computer.



That worked for me. Grub menu now loads to give the expected OS choices.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









I had same problem on my Aspire C24-865.
Tried boot-repair, with same results although noticed that the error report said 'try the following in Win10'




  1. Run Command.com as Admin.



  2. Enter following instruction:



    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi


  3. Re-start computer.



That worked for me. Grub menu now loads to give the expected OS choices.







share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 26 '18 at 19:58









Kulfy

3,39341039




3,39341039






New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered Dec 26 '18 at 19:49









Mike Barnard

1




1




New contributor




Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Mike Barnard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:22










  • Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday


















  • Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:22










  • Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday
















Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
– Ray Giguere
Dec 28 '18 at 3:22




Thanks all - Boot-repair dis not work and gave me some error message with the suggestion to bcdedit in Windows which did work - I got Ubuntu to appear in dual-boot . I had reverted to Ubuntu as Linuxmint did not work. Any simpleway to head back - uninstall Ubuntu and go on to install Linuxmint which I definitly prefer
– Ray Giguere
Dec 28 '18 at 3:22












Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
– Ray Giguere
yesterday




Thanks all - one last comment... From my experience do not use VisualBcdedit with W10 - once Visual opens the bcdstore, it is impossible to use, as an example, the following: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efi. Will go back to w10 with re-install and start-over... Thanks again
– Ray Giguere
yesterday













0














Accessing UEFI from Windows 10 on an Acer can be a bit convoluted. If the links provided by my peers in their comments don't resolve your issue, and you can't access the UEFI settings by hitting F2 or Del when the logo screen appears at power on, boot into Windows 10 and then




  • Click the Start Start menu and select Settings..

  • Click Update & security.

  • Click Update and recovery.

  • Select Recovery from the left column, then

  • Click Restart now.

  • Once boot menu appears, select Troubleshoot.

  • In Troubleshoot menu, select Advanced options.

  • In Advanced options menu, click UEFI Firmware Settings.

  • Click Restart. The system will restart and enter UEFI (BIOS).


Source: https://us.answers.acer.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/27103/






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:30










  • @RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
    – Elder Geek
    Dec 29 '18 at 17:40










  • Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday










  • @RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
    – Elder Geek
    1 hour ago
















0














Accessing UEFI from Windows 10 on an Acer can be a bit convoluted. If the links provided by my peers in their comments don't resolve your issue, and you can't access the UEFI settings by hitting F2 or Del when the logo screen appears at power on, boot into Windows 10 and then




  • Click the Start Start menu and select Settings..

  • Click Update & security.

  • Click Update and recovery.

  • Select Recovery from the left column, then

  • Click Restart now.

  • Once boot menu appears, select Troubleshoot.

  • In Troubleshoot menu, select Advanced options.

  • In Advanced options menu, click UEFI Firmware Settings.

  • Click Restart. The system will restart and enter UEFI (BIOS).


Source: https://us.answers.acer.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/27103/






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:30










  • @RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
    – Elder Geek
    Dec 29 '18 at 17:40










  • Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday










  • @RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
    – Elder Geek
    1 hour ago














0












0








0






Accessing UEFI from Windows 10 on an Acer can be a bit convoluted. If the links provided by my peers in their comments don't resolve your issue, and you can't access the UEFI settings by hitting F2 or Del when the logo screen appears at power on, boot into Windows 10 and then




  • Click the Start Start menu and select Settings..

  • Click Update & security.

  • Click Update and recovery.

  • Select Recovery from the left column, then

  • Click Restart now.

  • Once boot menu appears, select Troubleshoot.

  • In Troubleshoot menu, select Advanced options.

  • In Advanced options menu, click UEFI Firmware Settings.

  • Click Restart. The system will restart and enter UEFI (BIOS).


Source: https://us.answers.acer.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/27103/






share|improve this answer












Accessing UEFI from Windows 10 on an Acer can be a bit convoluted. If the links provided by my peers in their comments don't resolve your issue, and you can't access the UEFI settings by hitting F2 or Del when the logo screen appears at power on, boot into Windows 10 and then




  • Click the Start Start menu and select Settings..

  • Click Update & security.

  • Click Update and recovery.

  • Select Recovery from the left column, then

  • Click Restart now.

  • Once boot menu appears, select Troubleshoot.

  • In Troubleshoot menu, select Advanced options.

  • In Advanced options menu, click UEFI Firmware Settings.

  • Click Restart. The system will restart and enter UEFI (BIOS).


Source: https://us.answers.acer.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/27103/







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answered Dec 26 '18 at 22:11









Elder Geek

26.4k952125




26.4k952125












  • Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:30










  • @RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
    – Elder Geek
    Dec 29 '18 at 17:40










  • Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday










  • @RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
    – Elder Geek
    1 hour ago


















  • Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
    – Ray Giguere
    Dec 28 '18 at 3:30










  • @RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
    – Elder Geek
    Dec 29 '18 at 17:40










  • Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
    – Ray Giguere
    yesterday










  • @RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
    – Elder Geek
    1 hour ago
















Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
– Ray Giguere
Dec 28 '18 at 3:30




Thanks EG - I can get into BIOS directly at boot time but the UEFI sequence cannot be changed directly there on this Acer Aspire c24-865 (supervisor PW on, etc..). Original try was with Linuxmint but I did revert to Ubuntu as solutions were Ubuntu based. Now that I know it can be done, any simple way to unistal Ubuntu + dual-boot and proceed with Linuxmint which is really my prefered Linux flavor
– Ray Giguere
Dec 28 '18 at 3:30












@RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
– Elder Geek
Dec 29 '18 at 17:40




@RayGiguere questions regarding Linux mint are on topic at unix.stackexchange.com I suggest you ask there as MInt is off-topic here. It sounds like you have a buggy implementaion of UEFI. As you have the latest version of the BIOS I would recommend that you discuss your issues with changing the boot sequence with Acer support
– Elder Geek
Dec 29 '18 at 17:40












Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
– Ray Giguere
yesterday




Thanks - will do that. One last comment here : I think the culprit may be BCDEDIT Visual .... I did change the UEFI order using bcdedit set path command to get Ubuntu working prior to using VISUAL BCD to try to work my way back and install Mint.. did not work and once Visual BCD opens the bcd store, I cannot use bcdedit edit set path command anymore - get this strange message bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path EFIubuntushimx64.efiThe set command specified is not valid. Run "bcdedit /?" for command line assistance. The parameter is incorrect.
– Ray Giguere
yesterday












@RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
– Elder Geek
1 hour ago




@RayGiguere as it appears that you now have a question regarding Windows 10 (which bcdedit is a component of), I would be remiss if I didn't mention our sister site @ superuser.com. In fact you might find this interesting: superuser.com/questions/693715/…
– Elder Geek
1 hour ago



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