Франкенштейн из ноутбука и видеокарты — получилось или нет?

Is it possible to connect a regular PC graphics card to an old laptop via mini PCI-E? In this video, I test an eGPU on a Lenovo ThinkPad Edge E530: connecting it via a riser, running it under Linux, testing several adapters, and trying to figure out if the BIOS or the motherboard itself is limiting everything. In the video: — connecting the graphics card via Wi-Fi — testing the risers and power supply — testing with lspci in Linux — attempting to display an image on a monitor — issues with BIOS whitelist — thoughts on modifying the BIOS and future upgrades This isn't a setup or a "perfect build," but a real experiment with real hardware, errors, and attempts to understand how everything works. Telegram with ongoing projects and behind-the-scenes coverage: t.me/SoftN3xt If you like this format, support the video with a like and a comment. This greatly helps promote the video in YouTube recommendations. Timecodes 00:00 - Introduction: The Essence of the Experiment with an eGPU and a Lenovo ThinkPad E530 00:38 - Which Video Card Will We Be Connecting (Nvidia GT 510) 01:28 - Inspecting the Mini PCI Express Slot in the Laptop 02:05 - Reviewing the Riser Card for Connection 03:33 - Preparing the Modular Power Supply 04:38 - Test Run: Powering Up the Video Card 05:36 - Connecting the Riser Card to the Laptop and HDMI Output 06:40 - Starting Linux (Parrot OS) 08:16 - Checking via Console (lspci): Does the System Detect the Video Card? 08:31 - Replacing the Riser Card with a Secondary (Spare) Option 09:03 - Re-Checking the System with the New Riser Card 10:16 - Problem Analysis: Why Isn't the Video Card Detected? 11:14 - Test on a second Lenovo laptop 11:31 - Experiment results and plans for a future upgrade 12:13 - Bonus: Inspecting the motherboard and empty GPU slots #eGPU #Lenovo #ThinkPad #ThinkPadE530 #miniPCIe #videocard #Linux #laptopupgrade #riser #GTX960 #computers #hardware #laptoprepair #DIY #tech #laptop #experiment #bios #egpuadapter #pcmasterrace