You can only change a card that is already dedicated,which means it does NOT use shared memory and is NOT made by intel.
Yes, you can ONLY upgrade Nvidia an ATI cards in a laptop.
And then... usually its not possible. If it is, you have to get a card from the same brand and model, such as with Dell and most Toshiba laptops.
Or maybe you have a special laptop that uses a standardized interface called MXM. Almost all ACER laptops that have a model ending in G use MXM.
Alienware, HP elitebooks 15" and 17" also use MXM. there is MXM 2.1 and 3.0 which are incompatible with each other, and there are different sizes of each.
There is also a way to connect a desktop graphics card to your notebook and run it with an HDTV like a gaming system but better. Its not expensive or difficult, here is a guide:
http://www.notebookreview.com/default.asp?newsID=5846&review=how+to+upgrade+laptop+graphics+notebook
No because the card is built into the motherboard
There is no graphics card to change as the graphic chips are built into the motherboard. This is common with most makes of laptop computers.
You can swap a graphic card later on which you have use with the laptop.
No, sorry.
No.
You can upgrade/update your 'Graphic Card' on ANY laptop or computer 'Video Card' = 'Graphic Card' Search 'Video Card' for more help.
You would probably figure that out by calling dell's help desk number, but 99% chance is that you can't
any laptop with 4 gigabyte RAM and 1 gigabyte graphic card will work perfectly!
It depends on the laptop, if it was a custom one then you can change the video card. You need to check with the computer manufacturer.
yes if you have a large cabinet a mid tower or full tower you can change your Graphic card in case of using a new GPu then your intergrated card will be disabled! be sure to get a proper Psu to pwer it! Good Luck
This laptop comes with DDR3 SDRAM, and GMA 500MHD, graphic capabilities.
You cannot change your laptops graphic card.
It doesn't seem like that laptop's graphics are upgradeable. (Most laptops don't have upgradable graphics cards.)