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Which do you guys prefer, and why? I like blackboards, as I find dry-erase markers tend to run out of ink rather quickly.
The discussion revolves around preferences between blackboards and whiteboards, exploring various aspects such as usability, cleanliness, and personal experiences in different settings like home and school. Participants share their opinions on the practicality and aesthetics of each type of board, as well as the impact of chalk dust and marker smells.
Participants generally express a mix of preferences, with no clear consensus on which type of board is superior. Multiple competing views remain regarding the advantages and disadvantages of blackboards versus whiteboards.
Some participants note that their experiences with blackboards and whiteboards may vary based on regional differences, such as the color of boards used in classrooms. Additionally, there are references to specific incidents that highlight practical issues, such as the permanence of marker on projection screens.
This discussion may be of interest to educators, students, and professionals who frequently use writing boards in their work or study environments, as well as those considering the purchase of such equipment.
Smartboards?Greg Bernhardt said:Why no option for Smartboards?
Ha!... Hahaha. You are funny. Your avatar image is funny too, I like it.Monique said:All you need is a magic drawing board:
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Etch-A-SketchMonique said:All you need is a magic drawing board:
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When I lived in Taiwan, the boards in our classrooms were green as well, but we still referred them as blackboard (黑板).Psinter said:By the way, where I come from I've never seen blackboards. They are green here.
Evo said:Smartboards?
EDIT: Holy Crud! Well, they cost thousands of dollars to begin with! You need hardware and software.![]()
How the hell is he doing that? All through my school days, including college, it was blackboards, and not one of my teachers ever did anything like this.montadhar said:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=watch?v=l789l6np-qA
You cannot do that on a whiteboard!Still a fan of whiteboards though.

Oh NO!BobG said:In a class I took, they have a whiteboard, plus a white projection screen that can be lowered down in front of the whiteboard for slide presentations.
Seeing as how there were a lot of electrical circuit diagrams in the slide presentation, the plan was to project the diagrams directly onto the whiteboard and make annotations on the board as he discussed the circuit.
Problem is, he forgot to raise the projection screen first and wound up making his annotations on the projection screen instead of the whiteboard.
Dry Erase markers don't erase from projection screens.![]()
Same thing happens on some chalkboards - probably really low quality ones.GabDX said:Blackboard by far. I don't think I have ever seen a whiteboard without stuff permanently written on it.
We didn't have inkwells, but we did use "cartridge pens" which used a plastic vial of liquid ink and a fountain-pen type nib. All southpaws that I knew, including me when I wrote with my left, used the "hook" method wherein you curl your wrist around from the top and actually do the writing from the right side of the line. I've since quit doing that due to better ink technology, but can't match the penmanship that I had with that technique.anorlunda said:If you are left handed like me, your hand often drags over what you just wrote. On whiteboards that smears the text, blackens my hand and makes the text near impossible to read.
I tried that and got a "This Video Does Not Exist" message. :(montadhar said:
For small marks-Ben Niehoff said:On whiteboards, however, if the markers get old, they may leave permanent marks that cannot be erased (at least, not without special solvents that never seem to be readily available).