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White boards are in my opinion one of the most important tools developers have. I work for a startup company who found me some free office space at a local univeristies innovation office. The offices here didn't have a white board, nor the cash in the budget too purchase them.

We ended up buying cheap tile board from Lowes which works fairly well; however, if you leave stuff on them for too long it will be harder to erase.

What cheap white board solutions can you come up with? We are trying to figure out if we can coat the tile board with something to make it a little less resistant to staining. But so far our solution costed $30 for two 4x8 sheets. I'm tempted to use this tile board instead of drywall when I get around to building my home office.

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Let's move this to superuser. – Daniel A. White Jul 31 at 14:37
If I could vote to move it directly to SU without re-opening it on SO (where it really is OT) I would. – Neil Butterworth Jul 31 at 17:14
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I struggled wether this was off topic. SO is a forum for all questions pertaining to programming which a white board is such a fundament tool. It'd be the same as asking where I can get a cheap IDE. – Josh Jul 31 at 18:15
FWIW... I love this question. It's not appropriate for SO, and... probably inappropriate for SU as well... but i gotta hope it finds a home somewhere! – Shog9 Aug 2 at 4:20
We've lined the walls of our office with tileboard and it works great as whiteboard material. We use Clorox wipes to erase stuff when the erasers don't work. Occasionally we go over them with 409 if there's something that's really stuck on. – rob Oct 13 at 23:54

migrated from stackoverflow.com Nov 28 at 18:46

closed as off-topic by Diago Nov 28 at 18:46

Questions on Super User are expected to generally relate to computer software or computer hardware in some way, within the scope defined in the faq.

11 Answers

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Use a window or other sheet of glass, or bath board, or whiteboard paint. Lifehacker have a load of tips on how to build them.

If you use glass you can light it from one end and the writing will glow. Which of course no geek would be interested in.

Update: as far as cleaning a whiteboard, I found that a few pumps from one of those alcohol hand-cleaner dispensers (that are everywhere now thanks to swine flu) and a few sheets of paper hand towel work like a charm to clean a whiteboard, even if someone's been using flip-chart pens on it.

I just stumbled upon an Instructables article on creating a glass whiteboard, complete with some pictures:

One from some TV show/film (pic is from NUMB3RS):

example glass whiteboard

And the Instructables version:

instructables version

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Glass is a cool idea, has a nice futuristic look to it – Josh Jul 31 at 14:09
and [often] cheaper... not so sure on the "futuristic look" though :) – warren Sep 29 at 11:13
@JOsh - probably, but not when it's combined with old wooden frames :) – ldigas Oct 14 at 0:08
Re first picture, yep that's numb3rs, took the liberty of editing your post to stae so confidently :) – RCIX Nov 28 at 11:47
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The cunning trick to erase old writing is to scribble over it with a FRESH marker, then rub it off.

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Yea I found that out today, and it works like a charm. – Josh Jul 31 at 18:16
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For a few years, one of my walls was covered with whiteboard contact paper, which was quite nice.

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We've used something like that at work, and it works pretty well – Jonik Aug 11 at 8:28
yeah - that stuff is awesome.. as long as you clean it frequently with isopropyl :) – warren Sep 29 at 11:14
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The absolute cheapest white board you'll find comes from home improvement warehouses like Lowe's or Home Depot. That sounds like what you already have. Anything higher-quality is going to cost more. As for old markings being hard to erase... well, that's a problem with almost any white board, particularly the cheap ones. Good ones just are not cheap.

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Oh right, and glass is awesome and pretty cheap, but installation can be the deciding factor there. – Matt Ball Jul 31 at 14:09
At my office, we have a bunch of 8'x4' white tileboards that we put up on the wall. If you use a cleaning spray with paper towels, you can usually get the older markings off, too. – rob Oct 13 at 23:21
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You could always paint one on:

Product:
http://www.rustoleum.com/CBGProduct.asp?pid=128

Result:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/chriswburke/2608401158/

Warning For Magnetic Layer:
http://raubinc.blogspot.com/2008/01/magnetic-paint.html

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Those whiteborad paints are usually very expensive and require professional decorator skills to apply correctly. – Neil Butterworth Jul 31 at 14:15
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A couple of companies make dry-erase sheets that cling to a smooth surface like those stickers people put in car windows that don't use adhesive. If your wall is not smooth, you can use push pins or tape. Amazon has one here. Big advantage is they are portable, and can be moved around. So when planning a project, a sheet may start in the middle of the wall, but if we need to keep it longer, move it to the top corner, where it is out of the way. Or if planning code modules, the programmer for that module can take it back to his work center after the planning meeting.

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+1 was not aware of these great idea – Larry Aug 21 at 14:17
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DON'T USE WINDEX OR OTHER GLASS CLEANERS ON WHITEBOARDS!

Sounds like you cleaned your board with Windex or other window cleaners. If you did, you tarnished the finish that allows you to erase easily. This is a common mistake, my office did this and wasted a lot of expensive boards.

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Nope we didn't use Windex, we are not using a real white board there is no finish on it. Tile Board is a building material it is like drywall kind of, what I'd love to do is find out what the finish is on a white board and apply that to these. – Josh Jul 31 at 14:08
Ahh, then in that case try turtle wax. Not as good as the real thing, but about as close as you can get. – Neil N Jul 31 at 14:10
you can use windex if you're using glass 'whiteboards' – warren Nov 28 at 12:04
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Here's a $40 method that should work

if you've not got white walls, then just substitute the clear acrylic for white opaque....

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You could check out Johnny Lee's solution. But the method assumes you own projector - what is less probable, I guess.

But anyway, be informed.

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This is awesome!!! – Larry Oct 14 at 0:46
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I just discovered Magic Whiteboard, "only £29.99 for 25 A1 sheets".

tear it stick it use it

The quality isn't awesome but you can take your whiteboard back to the desk after a meeting without getting a hernia.

There's also Magic Blackboard for old school fun:

use it blackboard

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Why don't you try www.ideapaint.com. It is paint that dries to the same thing as a white board. So you could just paint your whole wall and have a huge white board. It works great.

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