Macs | MacBook Air (2011, 2012), 13-inch MacBook Pro (2011, 2012), 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro (2012), Mac Mini (some 2011, 2012) | MacBook Air (Late 2008, 2009, 2010), 13-inch MacBook (2009, 2010), 13-inch MacBook Pro and aluminum MacBook (Late 2008, 2009, 2010), 15-inch MacBook Pro (2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012) 15-inch Retina MacBook Pro (2012), 17-inch MacBook Pro (2007, 2008, 2009, 2010), Mac Mini (2009, 2010), iMac (Early 2009, some late 2009, 2012) | 15-inch MacBook Pro (2011), 17-inch MacBook Pro (2011), Mac Mini (some 2011), iMac (some 2010, 2011), Mac Pro (2010, 2012) | Mac Pro (some early 2008 and 2009 models) |
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GPUs | Intel HD Graphics 3000 and 4000 | Various NVIDIA GPUs | Various AMD Radeon 5000 and 6000-series GPUs | NVIDIA GeForce and Quadro desktop GPUs |
Drivers | Intel graphics driver 15.28.8.64.2875 | NVIDIA Verde notebook driver 306.97 | AMD Catalyst 12.10 driver | NVIDIA GeForce 306.97 driver; NVIDIA Quadro 307.32 driver |
Notes | None. Intel's drivers aren't flashy but they're typically reliable. | Your experience with this driver may vary. If you encounter crashes, try rolling back to an older version; my 2010 MacBook Air seems happiest with the 295.73 driver from February, 2012. Also note that, yes, iMacs and Mac Minis do tend to use laptop-class GPUs. | If for whatever reason the 12.10 driver won't install (it seemed not to like my 2011 iMac), try the 12.8 version here. Older 2000, 3000, and 4000-series GPUs (most often found in 2007, 2008, and some 2009 and 2010-era iMacs) don't have official Windows 8 driver support; you can try the latest Windows 7 driver from here, or content yourself with the performance of the Boot Camp driver, which will probably be fine for these older GPUs. | These cards were only available as an upgrade option for 2008 Mac Pros, or if you've installed an upgraded graphics card in your Mac Pro at some point. |