This is not directly possible. The graphics card is intended for installation in a PC.
What do you have in mind? Do you simply want to use the laptop as a screen?
Then, in addition to a PC where the graphics card is built in, you would also need an HDMI input, which not every laptop has. Most laptops only have outputs.
To do this, check the following:
Dimensions: Height: 112 mm x Width: 40 mm x Depth/Length: 252 mm
Power supply: min. 400W with 1x 6-pin power connector
Here is a working link:
https://www.mediamarkt.ch/de/gaming/pc-gaming/gaming-pc/omen-by-hp-desktop-pc-880-044nz-gaming-pc-intel-core-i7-7700-36-ghz-basisfrequenz-schwarz-/idp5nh8e4stk
I think this old Prozi will slow down the graka. Sincle-core performance is poor and it sucks up power like stupid. 500W is certainly enough, provided there are no other power-hungry components in the PC. It's better to buy a quality power supply than even more watts.
In principle, there are no incompatibilities between mainboard and graphics card combinations. The interface on the mainboards is standardised and all manufacturers therefore work with the same guidelines, so that ultimately everything runs on everything.
Should fit. Whether the i5 becomes a bottleneck depends on the application. If your 2500k is running at base clock and you play BF1 &Witcher etc. the CPU will "slowly" reach its limits. Meanwhile, more and more games benefit from 6 - 8 threads.
My personal tip: Overclock the CPU as much as possible (temps in the green range), then the CPU should not become a bottleneck for the time being.
Yes, it is compatible. The mainboard has DDR4 RAM as working memory and the graphics card has GDDR5 RAM as memory. These work independently of each other.
This model definitely does not.
The mainboard does have a PCI-E x16 slot, but since it's micro-ATX form factor, I doubt there's a card that will even fit in the case. Apart from that, there's only a 250 watt power supply inside, which won't be enough for such a card. And then there's the problem that the processor and the rest of the components would probably slow the card down anyway, because they can't keep up with it.
I don't want to rule out the possibility of upgrading the PC with a graphics card, but it's difficult to figure out how much power it might consume (I'm guessing 50 watts at most, if not less, so there's not much to go on) and whether it's worth it.
Complete PCs are usually built in a very minimalist way and therefore don't offer enough room for upgrades. Usually only a graphics/RAM upgrade is possible and only if the PC was designed to be relatively powerful from the start.
The power supply should not really be a problem. The connections on the 960 in the Akoya are the same and the power consumption of the 1060, which is sold as particularly efficient, is very moderate.
It's hard to say about the space (if you don't have a Medion Akoya), because the dimensions are somewhat different depending on the cooler/manufacturer. If you already have the Medion, it's best to measure it yourself and then compare it with the information here.
Basically, the dimensions of the 1060 will be similar to the 960 already installed.