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If you own such a laptop today, the final Intel driver is stable enough to keep Windows 7 running as a retro machine. But don’t expect to install it and suddenly enjoy HD streaming or modern 3D games. The hardware, not the driver, is the ultimate limit.
Introduction: The Integrated Graphics of the Late 2000s The Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 4500MHD was a ubiquitous integrated graphics solution found in countless laptops from 2008 to 2010, particularly on Intel’s Montevina platform (Centrino 2). It powered budget to mid-range notebooks from Dell, HP, Lenovo, Acer, and Asus. For many users, Windows 7 (released in 2009) was the operating system this chip ran for most of its working life.
The Intel GMA 4500MHD driver for Windows 7 does exactly what it was designed to do in 2011–2013: make a low-end laptop usable for office work, DVD playback, and light casual gaming. It never pretended to be more than that.
For anyone trying to squeeze life from an old GM45 laptop: install the final driver (15.22.58.2993), disable all visual effects except Aero, stick to lightweight software, and accept that this chip’s glory days were over a decade ago.