It technically is replaceable but it would be a huge hassle. Laptop video cards are more expensive and harder to pull out/replace. If she doesn’t do any gaming or video-intensive programs, then uninstalling the drivers should be okay.
What you might try to do is update the drivers to the latest version on nVidia’s website.
If that doesn’t work, then try using an older driver which may be more stable.
Open up the case and look. If it is in a slot near the bottom, then yes. Don’t touch anything w/out grounding yourself. If you need more help email me through my Yahoo profile.
Sounds like the drivers for the Nvidia is the issue. Go into safe mode and roll back the driver to what you were using before. If it is a driver issue, that will fix the issue.
August 5th, 2008 at 6:34 pm
It technically is replaceable but it would be a huge hassle. Laptop video cards are more expensive and harder to pull out/replace. If she doesn’t do any gaming or video-intensive programs, then uninstalling the drivers should be okay.
What you might try to do is update the drivers to the latest version on nVidia’s website.
If that doesn’t work, then try using an older driver which may be more stable.
August 6th, 2008 at 5:37 pm
Open up the case and look. If it is in a slot near the bottom, then yes. Don’t touch anything w/out grounding yourself. If you need more help email me through my Yahoo profile.
August 7th, 2008 at 4:04 pm
in a laptop it is not replaceable.
August 10th, 2008 at 8:23 am
Sounds like the drivers for the Nvidia is the issue. Go into safe mode and roll back the driver to what you were using before. If it is a driver issue, that will fix the issue.
Good luck.
Z