Question about MacBook

Foxrac

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Now, MacBook does have crappy Intel GPU, called GMA 950 but I don't want crappy Intel GPU and how I can replace the different video card on MacBook, such as GeForce.

Does would void the warrenty if replace GeForce on MacBook or never offer one?
 
I don't find any info about replace other graphic card on MacBook.

I'm not talking about MacBook Pro...
 
well, generally you cannot upgrade video chips on laptops. the only way is to buy a macbook pro. you can get a refurbished one lot cheaper than the new ones. apple store online have it. not at retail stores though.
 
It's bad idea. My best friend have problem with her laptop. It have Intel and NVIDIA. It's pretty overheat so easy on tiny heatsink. It's auto shut down all times during summer time. Oh poor to her. She have to use fan case under her laptop.

Apple - Support - Discussions - High CPU temp on new SR MBPs ...
That's bullshit. Intel do nothing with that. It have no problem on Macbook but only Mackbook pro.
560948838_22d54273f3.jpg


You see Intel processors, Intel chipset, and Nvidia GPU use share heatsink. That's bad!

I stay avoid from powerful GPU on laptop due overheat, drain battery life, and more weight. My Nvidia 7800GT SLI is more heat than AMD dual cores. No worry, my chipset, gpu, and cpu have own heatsinks each, not share to keep chipset and CPU cool down.

Intel use 65nm (nanometer) and Nvidia still use 90nm. The first 65nm GPUs from NVIDIA will arrive in September and Intel will be 45nm soon.
 
well, generally you cannot upgrade video chips on laptops. the only way is to buy a macbook pro. you can get a refurbished one lot cheaper than the new ones. apple store online have it. not at retail stores though.

indeed, no laptop can be upgrade, but only add-in RAM, HDD and CD/DVD-ROM.
 
well, generally you cannot upgrade video chips on laptops. the only way is to buy a macbook pro. you can get a refurbished one lot cheaper than the new ones. apple store online have it. not at retail stores though.

Oh, I got it.

I believe it's same applied to Windows based laptop that can't replace other graphic card or GPU since GeForce Go or ATI Mobility aren't ungradable or replace. I'm looking for black MacBook, also I don't want running the games but only use for general programs like Google Earth, Safari, Firefox, watch DVD movies or others.

Thanks for answering...
 
It's bad idea. My best friend have problem with her laptop. It have Intel and NVIDIA. It's pretty overheat so easy on tiny heatsink. It's auto shut down all times during summer time. Oh poor to her. She have to use fan case under her laptop.

Apple - Support - Discussions - High CPU temp on new SR MBPs ...
That's bullshit. Intel do nothing with that. It have no problem on Macbook but only Mackbook pro.
560948838_22d54273f3.jpg


You see Intel processors, Intel chipset, and Nvidia GPU use share heatsink. That's bad!

I stay avoid from powerful GPU on laptop due overheat, drain battery life, and more weight. My Nvidia 7800GT SLI is more heat than AMD dual cores. No worry, my chipset, gpu, and cpu have own heatsinks each, not share to keep chipset and CPU cool down.

Intel use 65nm (nanometer) and Nvidia still use 90nm. The first 65nm GPUs from NVIDIA will arrive in September and Intel will be 45nm soon.

Wow, I must know about it, oh well...

Now, I prefer to use games for desktop.
 
Laptop don't have PSU inside.

Macbook with Intel can work fine with any OS.

Ok, there's others....

Laptops' upgradeability is severely limited, both for technical and economic reasons. As of 2006, there is no industry-wide standard form factor for laptops. Each major laptop vendor pursues its own proprietary design and construction, with the result that laptops are difficult to upgrade and exhibit high repair costs. With few exceptions, laptop components can rarely be swapped between laptops of competing manufacturers, or even between laptops from the different product-lines of the same manufacturer. Standard feature peripherals (such as audio, video, USB, 1394, WiFi, Bluetooth) are generally integrated on the main PCB (motherboard), and thus upgrades often require using external ports, card slots, or wireless peripherals. Other components, such as RAM modules, hard drives, and batteries are typically user-upgradeable.

Many laptops have removable CPUs, although support for other CPUs is restricted to the specific models supported by the laptop motherboard. The socketed CPUs are perhaps for the manufacturer's convenience, rather than the end-user, as few manufacturers try new CPUs in last year's laptop model with an eye toward selling upgrades rather than new laptops. In many other laptops, the CPU is soldered and non-replaceable.

Many laptops also include an internal MiniPCI slot, often occupied by a WiFi or Bluetooth card, but as with the CPU, the internal slot is often restricted in the range of cards that can be installed. The widespread adoption of USB mitigates I/O connectivity to a great degree, although the user must carry the USB peripheral as a separate item.

NVidia and ATI have proposed a standardized interface for laptop GPU upgrades (such as an MXM), but again, choices are limited compared to the desktop PCIe/AGP after-market.

Now, my answer is battery???
 
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