
- #MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT INSTALL#
- #MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT DRIVERS#
- #MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT UPDATE#
- #MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT MAC#
You may wish to change this for a more legible font, an example of which is
#MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT MAC#
With the Arch installation media on a flash drive, you can boot it by holding down the Alt (or Option) key while your Mac starts up, and then selecting the applicable EFI Boot option when the Apple boot manager appears.Īs this model of notebook has a high DPI display, the console font displayed will be extremely small and depending on your preferences is likely to be uncomfortable to use. Please refer to the official Installation guide for more detailed instructions, as the following content mainly describes deviations from those instructions that are specific to this MacBook model.Īs this Mac model does not include a CD or DVD drive, you may wish to copy the Arch installation media onto a USB flash drive.

Installation is similar to any other standard laptop. Please keep in mind that the volume of the startup sound can only be modified reliably in OS X. Just boot in OS X, mute your system sound and reboot again to the Arch Linux Installation media. Note: If you plan to remove OS X, it is advisable to disable the MacBook startup sound before proceeding with partitioning. If you plan on keeping OS X for the purpose of dual booting, you need to manually shrink the main OS X HFS+/APFS partition from within OS X's Disk Utility program.
#MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT INSTALL#


Specifically, the procedure for installing Arch Linux on a MacBook is:
#MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT UPDATE#
I would install the base OSX that came with your MBP, and then update right away to the most recent OSX you prefer.
#MACBOOK PRO 13 MID 2010 WIFI CARD REPLACEMENT DRIVERS#
You will have missing Broadcom drivers depending on the model. What leads to this issue is installing a new HDD/SDD, while performing a new installation of Sierra/High Sierra.

This carries over all existing drivers from the old OSX onto the new one. Usually, Mac users don't notice this issue because they update from one OSX to a newer version(piggyback upgrade). It's known that Apple neglected to include drivers for Broadcom chips on newly downloaded Sierra/High Sierra operating systems. This Wifi issue is pretty common on Macs with Broadcom chips and FRESH OSX installs from those years. Associated with a common issue with Macs of this time running FRESH(no piggyback upgrades) Sierra/High Sierra installs. Hard for them to fail, and are one of the most reliable components of a whole computer.ġ. Wifi cards are pretty resilient little guys.
