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Hack mac laptop to be a mac tablet in 15 minutes or DIY Cintiq

Step 3Mount the panel on the back of the screen.

mount the panel on the back of the screen.
place the panel so that the sensor area is not blocked by any circuits. Fasten into place. I used duct tape.
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4 comments
Jan 13, 2008. 11:27 PMkraken1988 says:
Duct tape is awesome... but there must be a more proffessional approach to this.... Great idea, to bad I don't have any money or parts.
Nov 11, 2009. 5:30 PMsawnsu says:
HI My wife has an old ibook and im trying to convet it for her  but in all honesty we dont have money. I would like to see if i can create it for her. I am not able to see this diy due to the pro subscription which we cant afford. can someone anyone please email me the pdf to give me this oportunity see this diy and try and create it for my wife

Thanks
Jul 17, 2011. 4:21 PMstatic says:
I don't understand your request. While you need a subscription to download the PDF file yo don't need a subscription to actually view an instructable. The fact I'm responding to a comment you made to the instructable means you can view it. In the event you want to do is be able to study the instructable off line, most if not all browsers will save a web page as a file. Simply save each step as a web page. No not as handy as being able to download a single PDF file, but that's life for us who can't afford premium services, and have to make do with free or lower cost options. Good luck with it...
Jan 31, 2012. 8:32 AMgmichaelt says:
Better yet, each time you elect to view the 'next step' in an instructible, direct that step to open in an adjacent tab (browsers now pretty much universally allowed tabbed browsing, but they vary in how they implement the 'open in new tab/window/' option). You should be able to work out, via the Preferences/Settings/Options for your browser, how to modify a click of a link to have that link open in a new tab. In any case, you can almost always use the contextual menu (or right-click + menu) to arrive at the same result.

When you're done opening all the steps (each in its own tab), you're left with a window that has multiple tabs arranged, left-to-right, in sequence for the 'ible you're considering. Passing quickly through the steps--whether in forward order, or reverse--is just a matter of clicking on the next tab in sequence.

If your browser allows for it, you might then save the tabs currently open as a set e.g. 'bookmark all tabs' or 'bookmark tab group' or something similar.

Questions about how, in particular, to do any of the above will be loudly ignored.
Nov 11, 2009. 5:31 PMsawnsu says:
p.s my email is sawnsu@gmail.com
thanks
Jan 31, 2010. 8:34 AMgetsdhc says:
Hello from mex.

Well Im a disigner and actually I work in a G pen 450 the prize is very good cause are the first line, round prox the $45 dollars. 

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Author:c4l3b
married, 2 kids, 2 businesess. no time.