![2010 macbook pro gpu recall 2010 macbook pro gpu recall](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bTm0Q1utcV4/maxresdefault.jpg)
tons of technique details about UEFI/GPT/BIOS/MBR
#2010 macbook pro gpu recall windows
Yes, I have spent a weekend on running Windows installation for about 10 times, but see what I've got: Maybe your advice would be a correct answer for most "unsupported" situations, but not for this one. It's totally ok for me that you said "no, we could not help you on this", however, I disagree that "it not worth it to dig a solution for it, just buy a new one". That's not said your referral for this question to Apple was wrong, and I totally understand that any industry product has a life cycle and this one is just out of support 'officially'.
![2010 macbook pro gpu recall 2010 macbook pro gpu recall](https://9to5mac.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2014/10/gpu.png)
Chris Breen offers workarounds and a link to the Big Fix. 4th gen (2016) MacBook Pros had only USB-C ports, an unreliable keyboard with the butterfly mechanism, and a bunch of. The mid-2010 15-inch MacBook Pro was a lovely machine-unless you had one with a defective video card. 3rd gen (2013) Retina models had memory soldered on the board and had massive Staingate issues. I guess Im just a little reluctant to get all. Thats why its unsettling to me that we havent seen a lot of the traditional precursors like supply falloffs, leaked pics, or concrete evidence, the night before a major launch. People come to this 'Comunity' forum, not only for "official support" but also for "help to fix". After the 2010, MacBook Pros started going downhill: Late 2nd gen (2011) MacBook Pros were riddled with AMD GPU problems. Im certainly not one to argue against the lessons of history. Here I offered a solution to get rid of this problem, which I think was main concern of OP, to ' fix it'. This issue made the malfunctioning computers show the same symptoms namely, distorted videos or no video showing at all, or an unexpected system restart or reboot. It affected almost all computers sold between Feb 2011 and Dec 2013. From a user's point of view, I'm not quite sure there's any difference between 'running' and 'supported'. 2011 saw a well-documented and widely criticized graphics card failure on the MacBook Pro.