Another Eee Tablet PC Hack

Want to build your own tablet PC out of the Eee? An Eee user owner posted about his experience here. Check it out.

Want to build your own tablet PC out of the Eee? An Eee user owner posted about his experience here. Check it out.

So you’re excited about the Eee 1000HE’s new chiclet-style keyboard but you can’t be bothered to buy the newer netbook?
You can just order a replacement Eee 1000HE keyboard from Asus for $15 and it should fit. Awesome, right?
[via Liliputing]
So you were able to install Hackintosh on your Eee, right? now you want to go the next step. Well, Eee Mac Journey has posted some steps so you can put on the glowing Apple logo on your Eee.

This awesome Eee 1000H mod is done by one Netbook News.de reader to keep his netbook fingerprint and smudge free.
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For those who want to hack their Eee into a tablet PC, the Aeeeris Tablet hardware kit enables you to turn your Eee into a tablet PC. It lets you scoop out the guts of your netbook and put them into a tablet-style frame.
The kit will set you back $60, and touch screens aren’t included. However, you can build your own Tablet PC for around $400 or less, which is a lot less money than you’d pay for most tablet PCs on the market.
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Someone on tom.com posted a quick tutorial to upgrade the processor of the Eee PC 701 with an ULV PM 753 1.2G 2M L2 cache processor.
Doing this of course will definitely void warranty, but if anybody here is willing to do this, tell me how it works out. Steps are detailed here.
I want a touchscreen Eee. That much everyone knows. But I don’t want to go through the hassle of opening and soldering my Eee so that I’d get the much-wanted touchscreen. Thankfully, some enterprising soul made this DIY touchscreen kit for the Eee 900/901 and Acer Aspire One. The great thing about this is that it’s solder-less, so I don’t have to get my hands dirty in modding my Eee. For $99.95, you get:
Sounds really good, if you ask me.
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For those who long to overclock their Windows XP-running 901s and 1000Hs but can’t use Eeectl, Gadzet gives a guide on how to modify the awesome overclocking software to be able to use on EeePCs other than the 701. More »
A while ago, I posted this hack to improve the Eee’s keyboard responsiveness. It basically entailed removing the keyboard and putting in a few layers of masking tape on it. However it came with a caveat: it can raise your Eee’s temperature significantly.
Good thing reader Anon was able to give me a heads-up on another way to go about this hack. Instead of using masking tape, he suggests using aluminum foil. He says that it will even lower the Eee’s temperature.
Thanks for the heads-up Anon! Here’s the link to the forum post in Eeeuser.com. Hack away!