I used a live version of Tails off a USB. Then I plugged the pen drive without turning it off.
And now it seems like that "grub" or whatever it is called, has erased or displaced my original boot setup (which was a linux/w10 dual boot). I can't do anything but use Tails on my USB, otherwise it won't recognise the former boot setup.
What should I do? Has that grub installed into the flash memory or something like that?
Ryan Adams
>he fell for the linux meme
Jacob Lewis
Imbecile. I think you should go to the BIOS and check the boot configuration.
Joshua Robinson
Install gentoo
Bentley King
Safely remove
Zachary Torres
Change the boot order in your bios your bios pleb
Julian King
Be more specific.
Already have. But it acts like there is nothing on the internal memory.
Lincoln Cruz
I had the EFI file on "trusted" (which was the Linux partition) and the EEMC card contained the w10 partition.
What the fuck is this.
Juan Baker
So the first of the list is windows..I don't want to help you. Delete windows and than I'll help you.
Camden Sanders
Why are you using secure boot?
Joseph Clark
Reinstall grub from you Linux disk. If you've overwritten it with tails, kill yourself.
Juan Martin
I'm using an Acer Cloudbook, followed a guide where Secure boot was needed. It was a pain in the ass to get it working.
I haven't overwritten shit. I tried to install persistent Tails on a second USB but it failed. I plugged the intermediary USB off and then this happened.
Adam Barnes
>publicly disclosing you use Tails rip opsec
Charles Wood
Turn secure boot off senpai. There is absolutely zero need for it for a personal system, and there's even zero need for it for a company computer.
Dylan Long
>I tried to install persistent Tails >trying to do something that defeats the purpose of the tool you're using and just leaves you with 10 years old software instead
Idiot.
Noah Lopez
Should've installed gentoo
Brandon Garcia
You accidentally specified the hard drive instead of the second usb. you're wiped mate.
Thomas Flores
>persistent tails
dumbass tails is meant to be a temporary operating system, why would you do that? defeating the entire purpose. You've wiped your drive. Sucks
Grayson Hill
>he doesn't main One-Shot Johnny
Asher Nguyen
If he can turn SecureBoot off; the spec says that users can disable it, but i have one cheap HP laptop that has no way to disable it.
I'm sure there are others with that "feature".
Nicholas White
OP realized how badly he just fucked up so he just quit replying. Thread's over guys, pack it up