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Author Topic: Cures for a panicking mid-2010 MacBook Pro  (Read 494 times)
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« on: November 13, 2013, 07:01:06 pm »

Cures for a panicking mid-2010 MacBook Pro
   
      
      
         




   

Reader Ted Gresham’s older MacBook Pro is misbehaving. He writes:




I have a 2010 15-inch MacBook Pro. I pulled out the DVD drive that I never used and installed an SSD drive. Lately, the MacBook has been crashing—displaying a black screen and then a message that I have to restart. Did installing the SSD drive break my Mac?



No. I’ve seen reports of this happening with this particular model—with and without an SSD installed. The consensus is that the computer’s NVIDIA GeForce GT 330M graphics card is to blame. This MacBook has the ability to switch from high-performance graphics to on-board graphics and switching from one to the other can cause these black screens and kernel panics.



There are a couple of workarounds you can try. The first is to launch System Preferences, choose Energy Saver, and disable the Automatic Graphics Switching option. This causes the MacBook to always run high-performance graphics, which will affect battery life.



You could also try the free gfxCardStatus application. This places a menu in the Mac’s menu bar that allows you to choose one graphics card or the other.
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