Ubuntu Drivers For 2010 Mac Book Pro
Yesterday I decided to reinstall Ubuntu on my old Macbook. I was expecting to spend a short time on it, as I remembered everything used to work perfectly on this machine and Ubuntu. Boy was I wrong.
Unless you're considering buying a very old Mac notebook, you needn't worry about the PowerPC architecture. Playing DVDs is easily done.
If you need the *nix aspect of Linux it's all there. If you want something like the repository system you have options available too. My idea would be to set-up a dual-boot environment.
For real H/W fault, I don't think so many people will see same error at same period (after upgraded to 10.10) like this. AppleMuxControl/kext/GPUPanic.cpp:127 The important point is, Apple provided OS update for us before 10.8, then we didnt know the actual graphic card's problem. We trusted Apple and bought macbook. But Apple told us that our graphic card got 'H/W' fault and no more support from 10.9. I like macbook and saved money to buy this in 2010.
In this article, we take it to the next level by doing the same with an older MacBook Pro while still using UEFI ala. Note: rEFit has been depreciated and you may wish to try instead. For the sake of my tests, I found rEFit did the job just fine on under OS X Mavericks. Some have claimed it’s possible to do this without UEFI, I’ve found that this isn’t really duplicatable – at least not reliably. This will work flawlessly even as the video driver and kernel updates roll in. Also, this guide assumes you followed the previous guide and have successfully installed (or other Ubuntu related distro) onto the MacBook Pro circa 2010. You can determine which model of MacBook Pro you have from a bootable USB Ubuntu MATE drive by typing this into the terminal.
I've tried updating the drivers from device manager with the inf's and it gives the error 'A newer version of the driver is already installed.' At a loss here Any thoughts on how I should proceed appreciated.

Macbook Pro
Amd cards for mac. In a terminal, type this to create the needed conf file – again, using nano, vim or whatever: sudo nano /etc/grub.d/01_enable_vga.conf Using the bus ids I retrieved previously (remember, yours will differ), the next step is to type them into the script as follows: cat. Are you running a compatible MacBook Pro? This has been tested with hardware from mid-2010. Specifically tested with. Did you setup and update grub correctly? GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT='quiet splash acpi_backlight=vendor' Note the use of ” and the underscore with acpi_backlight. This approach has worked for and allows me to dual-boot the MacBook Pro.
When comes to split PDF, click 'Split' tab to switch the interface. Drag and drop a PDF.