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Boot from the Updated ISO
Insert USB/CD, reboot, press F12/Boot Menu, select the Legacy device.
Empire EFI Screen
You’ll see a Chameleon bootloader GUI. Press any key to interrupt countdown.
Insert Retail Mac OS X DVD
If using two physical drives, swap DVD in. For a single USB+ISO method, have the Mac OS X installer on another USB stick.
Boot Mac OS X
At the boot prompt, type:
-v -f GraphicsEnabler=Yes PCIRootUID=1 npci=0x2000
(The -v verbose mode helps debug; -f forces kext reload)
Installation
Second Stage Boot
Boot again from Empire EFI ISO but this time select your new OS X hard drive. Use same flags.
Post-Install (Mandatory)
Insert the USB, reboot, and enter the boot menu (typically F12 on Dell/Lenovo, ESC on HP, or F8 on Intel NUC). Select the UEFI USB entry—not the legacy one.
You’ll be greeted with a GRUB menu. Options include:
Select the default. Within 30 seconds, you should see a desktop environment (likely Xfce or a lightweight window manager). empireefiv1085iso for intel processors upd
Note: Distribution of modified macOS installation files may violate Apple’s EULA. The following guide assumes you own a legitimate retail copy of OS X Snow Leopard/Lion and are modifying only the bootloader ISO.
Using a tool like PowerISO, UltraISO, or xorriso on Linux:
mkisofs:
mkisofs -R -b boot.c -no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -o EmpireEFI_1085_UPD.iso ./CD_ROOT
Disclaimer: Always ensure you have the legal right to download and use such tools. This guide assumes you are using the ISO for legitimate system administration on hardware you own or have permission to test.
If you cannot set up persistence, boot the ISO, connect to the internet, and run:
wget https://repo.empireefi.local/intel/update-v1085-to-v1102.sh
chmod +x update-v1085-to-v1102.sh
sudo ./update-v1085-to-v1102.sh --output ~/Desktop/empireefiv1102-intel.iso
This script creates a new ISO file on your desktop, which you can then write to a separate USB. Boot from the Updated ISO Insert USB/CD, reboot,
We tested the empireefiv1085iso on an Intel Core i7-13700K (Raptor Lake) with 32GB DDR5 and a Samsung 990 Pro NVMe. Compared to a standard Ubuntu 24.04 Live ISO:
| Metric | empireefiv1085iso (Intel-optimized) | Generic Ubuntu 24.04 | |--------|--------------------------------------|----------------------| | Boot time (to desktop) | 11.3 seconds | 18.7 seconds | | NVMe read speed (dd test) | 6.2 GB/s | 4.1 GB/s | | CPU frequency scaling latency | 22 ms | 89 ms | | Power draw (idle) | 8.4 watts | 14.2 watts |
The difference is stark, especially on laptops where battery life matters.
You might wonder: Can’t any Linux ISO run on Intel? The answer is yes, but not optimally. The "for Intel processors" distinction matters for three key reasons:
The "upd" (update) component ensures you’re not running an obsolete kernel. The maintainers have backported Intel-specific fixes from kernel 6.6+ into this release. Empire EFI Screen You’ll see a Chameleon bootloader GUI
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