![]() It has been upgraded to the maximum 8 GB RAM from its original 4 GB. It is fully working and in great condition. share the solution here to try help anyone who has similar questionĪnd if you ask me, I would say it's quite worth it. For sale is a Mid-2010 15 MacBook Pro with a 2.4GHz Intel Core i5-520M CPU and an official Apple 85W MagSafe Power Adapter. tons of technique details about UEFI/GPT/BIOS/MBR Yes, I have spent a weekend on running Windows installation for about 10 times, but see what I've got: Maybe your advice would be a correct answer for most "unsupported" situations, but not for this one. It's totally ok for me that you said "no, we could not help you on this", however, I disagree that "it not worth it to dig a solution for it, just buy a new one". That's not said your referral for this question to Apple was wrong, and I totally understand that any industry product has a life cycle and this one is just out of support 'officially'. People come to this 'Comunity' forum, not only for "official support" but also for "help to fix". ![]() Here I offered a solution to get rid of this problem, which I think was main concern of OP, to ' fix it'. Hard Drive: 320 and 500 Gigabyte hard drives came standard with the MacBook Pro 15' Unibody Mid 2010. RAM: The stock RAM included with the MacBook Pro 15' Unibody Mid 2010 can be easily upgraded to the maximum of 8 GB. From a user's point of view, I'm not quite sure there's any difference between 'running' and 'supported'. There are a number of components in the MacBook Pro 15' Mid 2010 Unibody that can be cost-effectively upgraded.
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