-<li>ELILO can't find the directory from which it was launched when launched
- from rEFInd in Secure Boot mode. This means that you must pass the
- <tt>-C <tt class="variable">/path/to/binary/</tt>elilo.conf</tt> option
- to ELILO. rEFInd does this automatically for the default ELILO option,
- but you should bear the need in mind if you edit that option or use the
- secondary boot options. Because of the same problem, you must specify
- the complete path to your kernel and initial RAM disk file in
- <tt>elilo.conf</tt>. Be sure to specify these paths using either
- forward slashes (<tt>/</tt>) or doubled-up backslashes (<tt>\\</tt>).
- It's possible that some other boot loaders will suffer from the same
- problem.</li>
-
-<li>Signing the Windows boot loader with a MOK won't work; it hangs,
- probably for reasons similar to the ones that cause ELILO to fail to
- find its home directory. Fortunately, the Windows 8 boot loader should
- work because it should be verified and launched via EFI calls rather
- than via the new shim-derived code. (I lack a Windows 8 installation
- for testing, though.) This limitation could affect you if you want to
- boot Windows 7 with Secure Boot active, though.</li>
+<li>Signing the Windows boot loader with a MOK won't work; it hangs.
+ Fortunately, the Windows 8 boot loader should work because it should be
+ verified and launched via EFI calls rather than via the new
+ shim-derived code. (I lack a Windows 8 installation for testing,
+ though.) This limitation could affect you if you want to boot Windows 7
+ with Secure Boot active.</li>