I have a Windows 11 laptop and recently gotten excited to try Linux. I read good things about Mint being pretty good to go out of the box, and while I can be a fast learner I’m also tired and don’t have a tremendous amount of bandwidth.

So I followed all the installation instructions, verified, flashed a USB, booted into it and started to install a dual boot of it. Made it through installation until it told me my computer had BitLocker on, and I’d need to go turn it off and try again. Fair enough.

Went back into my Windows OS (after booting it went to “diagnosing your PC”). I don’t seem to have bitlocker installed - looks like a Pro version thing which I don’t have. It did show that encryption was enabled, so I turned it off.

Restarted to boot to USB. Nope, “mmx64.efi - Not Found” error.

OK, googled it, renamed it, let’s go.

error: shim_lock protocol not found error: you need to load kernel first

OK… I googled it just enough to see this is going to be a pain.

I tried remaking my USB just in case, didn’t help. It’s extra frustrating because my first attempt to boot into Linux went so well! How did it go from booting into it flawlessly to giving me a series of errors?

Did I anger the Microsoft gods and now they’re blocking my path? Is this a bad omen that Linux is going to be a problem on my laptop in general?

  • James R Kirk
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    28 days ago

    It takes some doing, but you can live boot windows from a USB drive for those rare instances you need it. You can also just install it to a VM inside Linux (also not easy). But honestly these days the times where you’ll NEED Windows are few and far between (and getting fewer and farther).

    • Übercomplicated
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      228 days ago

      For the record, installing Windows in a VM and getting it to work can be a real pain in the ass. Just a little warning: don’t expect VM-Windows to be easy!

      • AugustWest
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        328 days ago

        Why is it hard? It used to be real easy to run in a VM. I am running windows 11 in docker and it was easy, maybe consider that?

      • James R Kirk
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        128 days ago

        True, I edited my comment. I personally recommend the USB method (or if you have easy access to the internals- just swapping out an SSD).

    • Ulrich
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      129 days ago

      You can also just install it to a VM inside Linux.

      That’s probably the better (but more complicated) solution.