I took the back off and found the main chip, made by Hynix but got zilch on searches for anything printed on it.
So I decided to try an experiment to see if the action of it could be improved. The grid in it is a flexible circuit much like in cheap keyboards and it didn't lay flat. The top case has a bunch of raised ribs and there's 16 pins that go through holes in the grid, which is held in place by little chunks of clear tubing.
The problem is the pin and hole spacing don't exactly match. Turns out that craft foam is exactly the thickness of those ribs, and I just happened to have a sheet. I cut pieces to fill all the spaces where the active area is. I finished it off with a sheet of bubble wrap with 16 holes punched to fit over the tube pieces. The overall action of it is much smoother with the grid mashed somewhat closer to flat VS being all lumpy.
But still the drivers were lousy. Cutting to the chase (after a long time of fruitless searching) I ran Unknown Device Identifier from Halfdone Development and it identified the tablet as a UC-Logic Technology Tablet WP3525 and a WP8060. One device, two ID's???
I expected a search for UC-Logic to lead to another dead company but <Gomer Pyle>Sur-prise! Sur-prise! Sur-prise!</Gomer Pyle> UC-Logic is alive and well and even better they still make tablets and they have drivers for XP, XP64, Vista, Windows 7 and OS X.
But wait, there's more. I'm pretty certain the old driver only supported 256 levels of pressure sensitivity. This driver does 512. Oooooyeah. Who needs a friking Wacom? Just did some doodling in PhotoShop and it works great.



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