
Top side of a mostly bare PCB (common version) with the standard modifications and the remote harness.

A horizontally-flipped photo of the same PCB as above.
The standard upgrade removes the violet wire (an additional unfused 12v source!). Since it's gone, you must get 12v to the trace where the violet wire was previously located, so that's the lone wiring modification there. If you are adding a keyless entry harness, you'll need a few more modifications. You can solder wires directly to the traces and run them on the bottom, but I opt to keep all of the new wires on the top of the PCB, poking through to the bottom for soldering to the traces. It matches the rest of the assembly, so it looks "correct."
The photos below show both sides of a nearly-bare circuit board with red and yellow indicating new holes that you must drill. The exact location is flexible; the goal is to get the wire so that it can make sufficient contact with the trace once it is soldered. You can drill these new holes without removing all of these components too, just be careful to not drill through something else (like a capacitor). A 5/64" (2mm) hole is perfect for 14 AWG (2 mm2) wire. Also, you may want to slightly enlarge any of the other holes to aid in assembly. The key to the color scheme in these photos:
The photos also have each new hole labeled and here is where each one goes:
And that's it! Easy enough.
Top side of a mostly bare PCB (common version) with the standard modifications and the remote harness.
A horizontally-flipped photo of the same PCB as above.