Wouldn't even call it "in depth", disallowing an alternative boot should be one of the first things any decent IT staff should do on any company machines, and therefore so should direct-to-consumer pre-installed tech like this.
99% of computer users are just consumers, nobody should have to think about security when they first get a new system beyond setting a password.
Wouldn't even call it "in depth", disallowing an alternative boot should be one of the first things any decent IT staff should do on any company machines, and therefore so should direct-to-consumer pre-installed tech like this.
99% of computer users are just consumers, nobody should have to think about security when they first get a new system beyond setting a password.