
I can provide plenty of more info/specs if needed, though I am currently thousands of miles away from the computer in question so I may be slower in responding.

This machine as many of its generation was dumped because of a graphics fault. I'm not too clear what the root issue of the problem is, but I think you guys can figure it out. I own a MacBook Pro 2011 A1286 which I got as a freebie from a friend who saved it from the corporate dumpster. I'm just wondering if anybody could help me understand this issue more, whether it be software or as I suspect hardware related. The way this has been fixed before has been sometimes resetting the PRAM alongside booting into safe mode, with multiple reboots usually being needed. ('Unibody' MacBook Pro Models) For example, if one is typing a document or listening to music, then the system is designed to use. Also occasionally patches of scrambled pixels will also pop up on the screen. By default, the 'Mid-2010,' 'Early 2011,' 'Late 2011' and 'Mid-2012' MacBook Pro models - automatically switch between graphics processors depending on need and no restarting is required. After having visited (weirdly enough) the University of Pittsburgh's virtual tour website, the MacBook Pro will start freezing up and the screen will flash with many different colors.

However, certain problems have arisen now on multiple occasions.

I seriously doubt any virus or malware is on it. Find out more about the new GPU option for MacBook Pro, and a new. All 2018 15-inch MacBook Pro models feature an integrated Intel UHD Graphics 630 GPU, along with a Radeon Pro 550X or 560X discrete GPU from AMD with 4GB of GDDR5 memory. So the MacBook Pro in question is pretty young in age, and I've run Malwarebytes on it for a while. Then in October 2018 Apple announced that a new graphics card option will be available to the 15in MacBook Pro from November 2018.
