Just install Intel Unison from the Microsoft store (free and works with all cpu's, in spite of its name.), and get better results right now. Been expecting MS to buy it off Intel and repackage it.
Besides, UEFI is a bad idea done badly.
I always assumed that the real reason why UEFI was introduced, was to preserve Microsoft's monopoly by attempting to destroy the ability to dual boot operating systems on PC hardware, while also giving it just enough superficial flashing lights, that excuses would be made for it as "innovation," by the same group of treasonous idiots who think that systemd deserves to exist.
After Firefox got rid of the old addon format, I went to Pale Moon for what felt like a year, but was probably considerably less; given the nature of the cave I live in, time moves very strangely for me these days.
I kept Firefox around though, mainly because PM became incapable of posting comments to YouTube, and when I posted said comments, I started noticing how much faster and less laggy video loading and playing was with FF.
So now with the new computer, I've mainly only used Firefox, and am enjoying the greater responsiveness. I agree with anyone who claims that Mozilla are arrogant , but I also don't care much, because I'm aware that wanting me to live in my pod, eat my bugs and shut up is what [b][i]every[/i][/b] corporation wants me to do these days; Mozilla are not unique in that regard.
I do not like the twenty first century.
This misses the point.
We don't want systemd to be able to emulate, in whatever degree, the previous init system. We do NOT WANT SYSTEMD. Not in any context, not in any scenario, and regardless of how you promote it.
We do not want systemd, and in whatever legal and ethical ways are available to us, we are going to fight to ensure a continued scenario in which we are not required to have or use systemd. You are not going to force it on us, and no argument you make, and nothing else you do, is going to change that.
I know that many of you either do not, or do not WANT to understand the fact that choice, in and of itself, is the central issue here; and choice is something which systemd's promoters are determined to prevent Linux users from having.
As a result of that, systemd has been, and will continue to be rejected by people who value having both fundamental understanding and control of the operating system that they use.
Your fault -- core dumped