Hello Csound1. I was wondering when one of my responses would end up with you pointing your guns at me. Was kind of hoping to avoid it altogether, tbh.
I believe I wrote:
"Yosemite makes more demands of the CPU and GPU than Lion does - I've seen it eat a few machines in my office, hence I stuck with Lion - so that could well be a factor, but the majority of cases highly suggests this is an issue affecting the discrete graphics card. For the record, the last straw for my GPU was trying to watch a video through an external display."
"Could" being the operative word, referring to the possibility of software being to blame.
Let me be as clear as I can: I have absolutely no desire to get into a petty flame war with you; there are bigger fish here for you to play with. Like most of the users following this discussion, I'm here for support and solidarity, since very little seems to be coming from the manufacturer themselves.
But to answer your question: I am not an Apple tech, nor am I privy to their manufacturing/software development processes, so I can't point to a specific component and say "here it is!", but it didn't take Sherlock Holmes-level detection skills to sit a group of 2011, 2012 and 2013 MBPs together, run the same tasks and compare the system monitors and GPU/CPU/fan status of each machine (fan speed being the first clue - and only warning - that the 2011 was not having a good time). This resulted in me spending the night trying to get the 2011 running again, btw - I managed to kill it by creating a podcast and importing it into iTunes! And the 2012 struggled with Mavericks and suffered under Yosemite. Not a sufficiently exhaustive test in your opinion? Well, I worked with what I had to hand… And I can demonstratively prove that gfxCardStatus is the only thing keeping my 2011 MBP alive.
Should I have written "Yosemite appears to make more demands" instead? My apologies.
Not to be rude, but please don't bother trying to make me look small in front of everyone else - we're all of us here already seemingly small in the eyes of the vendor - I just want a permanent solution to the problem most of us in this forum are struggling with. I don't know you, you don't know me and I don't care how many points you have or how respected you are in the community; I'm just a guy that spent a large amount of money on a MBP that can't stand up to its 2007 predecessor. If the discussion is helpful and polite, great. However, if you plan to take potshots at me, I plan to ignore them. I could have it backwards, and you might be being perfectly polite - in which case I apologise profusely - but wading through pages of topic-diluting arguments between yourself and other users tells me that's something best avoided.
If you don't like what I said, I'm happy to agree to disagree.