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Model A1502 / 2.6 GHz (Turbo Boost up to 3.1 GHz) or 2.8 GHz (Turbo Boost up to 3.3 GHz) dual-core Intel Core i7 processor with 4MB shared L3 cache.

Is it possible to add a graphics card?

Was wondering if I could add a dedicated graphics card to the 13' model like the 15' and 17' ones have. I don't think there is enough space as is, so maybe if I were to take out some less important things there would be enough room.

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Sorry, no its not possible.

These systems use the Intel Haswell CPU which has an Integrated Iris 5100 GPU services.

I assume your desire here is for heavy gaming. Sadly, Apple's laptops (and most others) are not intended for ultra heavy graphics needed for some of the interactive gaming thats shown up over the last year. This is were expandable desktop systems shine. As an example the Mac Pro.

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I just wanted to see if it was possible and to just say I had something that no one else would have, no other purpose than that.

Thanks for the response.

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what about a usual laptop like dell or something like this, i want to add a graphic card, as the computer is really good(cpu, RAM), but it do not have a graphic card, and i really need it(not for gaming), so what is the solution?

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Sadly there are limits within the laptop architecture of the given system. Must Laptops have only a few ports and don't offer external PCIe access which a high performance graphics card would need. As an example when Apple introduced the Thunderbolt interface a few outfits created a box which connected via Thunderbolt giving you a few PCIe slots. It was helpful but the Thunderbolt couldn't support the dual transactions driving the data to the card and the back to display on the screen. You really needed an external monitor. IBM and Compaq built earlier premium systems with AT card support back in the 386/486 days. Sadly there are a few options but they are as I described unwieldy to use so they died.

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