
Oh and, switching between the two has been a thing, or? Or, should I just look at the methods for the older laptops? I have been trying to look for this myself, but I don't seem to be able to find anything related to it, if you know where I can find anything like this, specifically for my model, I'd appreciate that. I'll imagine I'll be getting a tad bit cooler system as well as better battery life. This would be fine with me, to be honest. This would enable support for the Intel GPU, which would run fine afterwards, but disable support for external monitors until the next reboot. In the previous generations, this was possible using a specific EFI payload to disable the discrete GPU at boot time. If you need more information, have any tips or tricks, I'd love to hear from you. I don't really do any gaming, only scripting and programming, so I don't need much raw graphics power. The second best thing, I guess, would be to be able to completely switch off the discrete graphics card, and use the integrated intel one at all times. Obviously, I would love some 'easy' way to switch between both the graphics cards for performance and battery reasons, but I guess that is asking too much, keeping in mind I do not have OS X installed, at all.

Now, it's the first time I'm running Linux on a dual graphics system, so I'm not quite sure what I should do. I tried to look through 'lspci', and I couldn't find anything talking about intel graphics, so I suppose the system does not recognize it. 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
