![]() ![]() I've tested this on my late 2008 MBP 15-incher and it works perfectly. MacBook Pro models come with dual GPUs, and macOS a switching system that activates one or the other. If there are already apps open creating discrete dependencies, then it will not default to integrated-only mode. Note that as of version 1.7 (now at 1.7.5) gfxCardStatus now includes full support for the 9400M/9600M GT dual-GPU enabled Macs without logging out. Whats new in gfxCardStatus 2.4.4i: This update will default to integrated-only mode (if possible) when launching gfxCardStatus. ![]() ![]() Automatic application updating - checks for, downloads and installs new versions of gfxCardStatus automatically!.Tiny footprint - doesn't sit in your menu bar and hog RAM or CPU cycles.Growl support - so you know right when the GPU switches.Dependent process list - see which applications are currently using the 330M, if it's the active GPU! The developer of gfxCardStatus suggests that if any believe that an app is forcing the use of the dedicated card unnecessarily, they should ask the developers.Allows you to manually switch GPUs on demand!.Automatically updates when the GPU switches, in real time.Simple, clean "i" and "n" icons that signify Intel? HD Graphics, and NVIDIA? GeForce GT 330M graphics, respectively.GfxCardStatus is an open-source menu bar application that keeps track of which graphics card your dual-GPU (late 2008/2009 w/ 9400M/9600M GT, or 2010 i5/i7 w/ Intel HD/330M) MacBook Pro is using at any given time, and allows you to switch between them on demand. ![]()
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