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It shows the graphics driver as the component initiating the panic.
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You can distinguish this type of panic by looking at the panic log. Thanks to all who have weighed in so far. If defective RAM locations are touched this causes an operating system crash (kernel panic). I have yet to look up the specs to address whether the 16 GB of ram is enough to bridge the gap. I honestly was hoping to get a weigh-in on my hypothesis that this the result of an underpowered integrated GPU - or more importantly, validation that others have experienced the same thing (with or without it being an all-out failure). I didn't bother trying a third cable as the glitching has never appeared on the 4k monitor.
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if still same problem then reinstall the mac means first back up all your data the reinstall the mac with restore dvds or retail dvd. if coming then remove that one and put back the old one. I always use the thunderbolt/mini displayport to drive the monitor - and to date have used two different cables. took out the 1 ram from the laptop and run the laptop. My feeling is that if a bad cable was the cause, I'd see it no matter the circumstances.ģ. I question whether the built-in screen's display cable is the culprit as it doesn't happen when I am using it as my only monitor. Starting in safe mode seems to hamstring those same applications - so I can't really work in them.Ģ. It typically happens when I'm working in multiple GPU-intensive applications - not just when I have them all open. that connectes the GPU to the MacBook’s logic. Doing so makes it difficult to mimic the same conditions that bring about the glitching in the first place. The problems affect 15-inch and 17-inch MacBook Pros produced in 2011 and 15-inch Retina MacBook Pros produced from mid2012 to early 2013. All computers are complex devices, and hardware problems occur despite Apple’s boast of it just works, Macs are no exception. I did try running the machine in Safe Mode briefly, but quickly realized it wasn't going to work. One group that’s painfully aware of this is owners of 15- and 17-inch 2011 MacBook Pros stricken by system-crippling graphics issues, about which Apple has been indifferent. Well - I figured I'd see how many twists and turns the conversation tookġ.