UEFI has been the norm for well over a decade at this point. If you're trying to run a brand new GPU in a 15+ year-old system, you've already made many mistakes.
Yeah... I was a little confused myself.
Wasn't uefi a must already for windows 10 computers? Atleast for win 11 it is. We are probably talking 10-20% max of global computers that are affected and those also the type of computers that are not generally upgrading to RDNA4.
I believe it's a must for store-bought PCs, but it can be installed on BIOS systems manually
Wasn't uefi a must already for windows 10 computers?
Nope, I've been running Win10 on multiple computers with a BIOS.
Atleast for win 11 it is.
AFAIK, UEFI isn't technically a requirement. However, TPM 2.0 is, and that requires UEFI.
AFAIK, UEFI isn't technically a requirement. However, TPM 2.0 is, and that requires UEFI.
TPM 2.0 does not require UEFI. I have a system here with TPM 2.0 and only legacy boot support. And you can just buy a TPM 2.0 module and connect it with any board, that has a SPI connector.
UEFI came out in like 2005 and was standard on basically all new PC motherboards from around 2012
Tbh I'm shocked generations before this still had official BIOS support
Imagine buying a PCIE 5 card to use in a crusty old PCIE 3 or 2 board >.>
Pcie to agp adapter in hand
Cursed converter
PCIE to ISA adapter
PCIe to AGP and 12VHPWR to Molex
Can someone eli5 why the graphics card cares about UEFI?
Your guess is as good as mine.
I can only think about those performance profile options you have in your BIOS/UEFI menus
All graphics cards interface with BIOS/UEFI when the system initializes - every piece of non-hotswap hardware has to or it won't be initialized and cannot be used.
The question is really why should a graphics card maker care to dedicate time to make their card compatible with BIOS when 99.999% of the systems running their cards will use UEFI, and they said 'hey actually we don't care' as far back as 2023 in the 7000 series but for some reason (clickbait) this is being dug up again.
Huh, the 7000G series already required uefi, surprised it took them this long to require that for their dedicated gpus
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