On Sun, Dec 21, 2014 at 09:49:42PM +0100, Sebastiaan Lokhorst wrote: > Thanks everyone for your responses! It seems that gdisk is still favorable > for advanced tasks, but fdisk is can be used for basic tasks, as are > usually required by beginners. No, that was my point: for "advanced" tasks you need neither. I never read the beginners' guide, and don't care how it is formatted. I am just trying to un-confuse people regarding the whole GPT vs MBR thing... > 2014-12-21 20:54 GMT+01:00 Leonid Isaev <lisaev@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: > > > Yes. The age of a machine has no relevance for deciding whether to use GPT > > (or > > UEFI in general). > > > > This is not true. Some low-end modern machines completely drop legacy BIOS > boot. So booting via UEFI is required, and thus GPT is required. I really doubt this. Are you saying that some vendors on purpose break such things as booting from an external USB key? For example, I have an ExoPC tablet running Arch 64bit. It is true, that there is no checkbox in UEFI config saying "legacy BIOS". However, GPT partitioning is _not_ required at all. So, I nuked the EFI partition, made the entire SSD a LUKS container, and happily boot with MBR. Cheers, -- Leonid Isaev GPG fingerprints: DA92 034D B4A8 EC51 7EA6 20DF 9291 EE8A 043C B8C4 C0DF 20D0 C075 C3F1 E1BE 775A A7AE F6CB 164B 5A6D
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