- GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK HOW TO
- GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK PRO
- GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK BLUETOOTH
- GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK MAC
GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK PRO
Note: You may not see the Video Card heading if you have a MacBook Pro with Apple silicon (M1, M2, and their successors.) Plus, you may not see the Automatic graphics switching option in System Preferences. You might see some variant of Intel integrated graphics, whether it’s the Intel Iris Pro or Intel HD graphics. More than likely, this is going to be the case if you have a lower-end MacBook Pro. If you only see one graphics source in this list, it means you don’t have two graphics processing units.
GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK MAC
You can tell if you have two GPUs by going to → About this Mac → System Report → Graphics/Displays on your Mac.Īs you can see from my report, my 2012 15” MacBook Pro with Retina display has both an AMD Radeon M9 graphics card and the Intel Iris Pro integrated graphics:
GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK HOW TO
Call them first and describe the issue.4) What to do if you don’t see the Automatic graphics switching option on Mac? How to tell if you have dual GPUs Be courteous but persistent and you might be able to convince them to replace your logic board. My best advice is to call Apple and ask to speak with Customer Relations. I had this same problem since back in 2011 and was able to get my logic board (and battery) completely replaced outside of the replacement program's eligibility period-literally two weeks ago.
GFXCARDSTATUS MID 2010 MACBOOK BLUETOOTH
USB Device: Bluetooth USB Host Controller USB Device: Apple Internal Keyboard / Trackpad
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GT 330M, NVIDIA GeForce GT 330M, PCIe, 512 MB Graphics: Intel HD Graphics, Intel HD Graphics, Built-In Model: MacBookPro6,2, BootROM 0F, 2 processors, Intel Core i7, 2.66 GHz, 8 GB, SMC 1.58f17 System model name: MacBookPro6,2 (Mac-F22586C8) Kernel Extensions in process name corresponding to current thread: kernel_taskĭarwin Kernel Version 14.3.0: Mon Mar 23 11:59: root:xnu-2782.20.48~5/RELEASE_X86_64 So, what can I do to stop this? I think I read somewhere that the dGPU can be disabled, but there is so much information out there that I don't want to try 20 different things before something works. (I missed the recall/repair program by a week because the d*cks at Apple never notified me that such a program existed, and the Apple service rep wouldn't make an exception). It's been getting progressively worse, something several times a day. Over the past several months I've been getting kernel panics due to the graphics card, resulting in my mid-2010 MBP crashing.