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Kudos to the developers involved in this functionality.

Faster boot times and more secure installations are always advantageous. I'm all rooting for this development.

I've been wondering for a while why grub is still used, given that its basic architecture is outdated.



I believe the two main reasons are

- inertia (don't rewrite something if it works; who really wants to own responsibility for testing this thing on all architectures GRUB currently supports?)

- multi-OS boot scenarios (I assume this new system will support that, but (a) I don't know for sure and (b) I don't really want to boot all the way into Linux just to throw Linux away and boot something else...)




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