A view from above find the tabs holding the keyboard in on the top edge above the F keys:
There are 5 of these tabs on the top row of the keyboard. Press in the middle one with a micro flat head, and use another to pry up the back of the keyboard. Press the rest of them in and they will bow the keyboard out. Only pry from the middle, as this will enable the keyboard to slip under the 2 tabs on the sides.
Once the keyboard is popped out, flip up the black tab to release the ribbon cable. Set the keyboard aside.
Remove the screws at the yellow dots, and disconnect the ribbon cables in the red squares. Simply stick your fingernail under the black tab and gently pull up. They are the same style as the keyboard connector.
Flip over the machine, and remove all screws at the yellow dots. The red dots are rubber stoppers that must be pulled out of their holes to expose the screws below. They come out fairly easily using a small micro flat head screwdriver to pry them out. There is double sided tape on the bottom to keep them in place, and it is good for more than one application, so you need not worry about them falling out later.
Take off the hard drive door and the memory cover and set them aside. To remove the hard drive itself, lift up the black plastic tab and gently pull on it. The whole unit will come out.
Remove the battery, and under the battery there are 2 smaller silver screws in plain sight. These must be removed also.
Flip the machine back over, and gently pull the top plastic piece off. This is one of the easiest laptops I've ever disassembled. DO NOT use a screwdriver to pry the pieces apart, you WILL mar the plastic and it will look bad. There is still 1 small pair of wires connecting the top to the motherboard, but there is enough slack to set the top off of the bottom, exposing the motherboard.
The highlighted areas are the interesting areas. The bottom most area is the bluetooth port and caddy, complete with 3M double sided tape.
The proper cable and correctly sized module can be purchased from this
The middle area is a SATA port with power. Likely used on the 14+" models with an optical drive. Unfortunately, there is not enough room to fit another hard drive, or an optical drive in the case at all. One possible use, however, is to connect an eSATA port to this internal port to facilitate a native full speed external drive.
The top area is a second mini PCI-E slot. This can be used for a TV card, or a WWAN card, or even a PCI-E SSD such as the ones used in netbooks.
Lastly is the build and spec screen on the PCB itself. It seems there are more options than we think, that may or may not end up being released.
Mine was built on 5/10/09 between 4 and 5am. I don't know what the JM stands for, or the HF. I have an SU3500 CPU with the GS45 chipset. Seemingly there was motherboards made with:
SU2700 (Pentium 1.3ghz)
SU3300 (Core 2 Solo 1.3ghz)
SU3500 (Core 2 Solo 1.4ghz)
SU9300 (Core 2 Duo 1.3ghz)
SU9400 (Core 2 Duo 1.4ghz)
SU9600 (Core 2 Duo 1.6ghz)
I do not know what the 723 means. Perhaps others can shed the light on these unknowns.
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