Hi Juanito! I agree wholeheartedly about the proposal.
In fact, that is what I am researching before making any proposal. So yeah, as a user I'm kind of floundering, but I'm looking for clues.
Proposal:Any attempt to add a uefi-boot option to the current 64-bit iso needs to be done by someone who actually owns uefi-only hardware. Not just a VM. Not just a copy of the uefi specs. Not just an older box that has csm switchable options. Basically post-2016 hardware. Keep it generic. Ie, don't put a sticker on the release saying "only bootable on Intel NUCS".
Example: Netbsd long supported some archaic hardware that nobody actually owned anymore, but it passed their automated compilation toolchain with a tweak here or there. Then they find out that when someone tried it on *actual hardware*, it hadn't been bootable for 7 or 8 years or more. (Cobalt? I'll have to look it up)
DESIGN
Should someone be able to just DD, or use some other method like Gparted Live does it where you can mount an iso (or unarchive and zip) and merely copy files to a preformatted fat32 partition?
STRUGGLING
As a mere user, I'm trying my best to find options on my own suggest how to make an iso convenient to use in post-2016 hardware for others seeking the true TC path of enlightenment as a user.
Chicken-and-egg
If the 64-bit iso won't boot on post 2016 hardware, they certainly aren't going to get to the point of using tc-install for convenience. And no, not everyone scarfs up aging 32-bit machines to use a proposed improvement to the tc-install. So we're back to the iso. If that is to be offerred, that has to be able to bootstrap itself onto modern boxes.
Am I making sense? Any lurkers out there with skills (and actual uefi-only hardware) much larger than mine that can lend a hand to the project and help see it forward? Make improvements to tc-install? Make the iso bootstrappable on it's own?
And coordinate with the devs of course so we aren't turning TC into something else!
So even here as a faithful (L)user, I'm looking at whatever I can do for a possible solution. Anyone here with dev skills have an answer and want to pitch in with code?