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Yes. I have windows 11 and I went into the Bios (Gigabyte) to turn on Secure Boot. I didn’t have the option so I turned off “CSM Support” to get the option. Then I enabled secure boot. After that I have gotten a black screen ever since and I have tried several things to fix it like taking out that motherboard memory battery.
- 2 years ago
@LIIACEllL I had exactly the same issue with a gigabyte motherboard did exactly as you did in the BIOS they still haven't diagnosed the problem with my PC yet which I took in this morning. When I enabled secure boot it went with a weird booting cycle and I also got a black screen and as of the latest my PC isn't booting to the BIOS at all because they think that my motherboard is too outdated to support secure boot so they are troubleshooting it as we speak I updated to windows 11 early this year and depending how the OS was installed for the boot cycle they also feel could be the problem I may need a new motherboard. The instructions for the procedure at all is risky depending on your motherboard I'm not savvy with messing with my BIOS I just followed what was posted like many others and the results are different depending on your situation.
- 2 years ago
Yeah. Updating to Windows 11 was even a headache because I had to enable TPM 2.0. I have a laptop older than my desktop and it already has secure boot on AND had no issues moving to windows 11. I think its a Gigabyte problem. There is an update for the BIOS but I can't put it on without anything on the monitor. So even if I save my computer, I'd be a fool to try to get secure boot to work. I'm also probably just going to go back to windows 10 if I can.
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