We have two and both work fine (different brands). We use them all the time to remind people of the outcomes of meetings (diagrams, todo lists, designs, etc). One is fourteen years old and needs the "darker" button pressed. The other has a computer interface to send the scan to your PC, neat but not often used. Clifford Heath.
Embedded s/w engg. tools
Started by ●July 26, 2004
Reply by ●August 2, 20042004-08-02
Reply by ●August 2, 20042004-08-02
There is a low cost ($80 or so) package from Pixid called Whiteboard Photo that does a great job of turning a digital camera image of a white board or a sketched sheet into a clean image. Even corrects perspective error on the original image. w..> >All of that long winded non-sense to say that > >I agree the best tools include the whiteboard > >and markers ;-) > > > > And don't forget a camera or a white board scanner to capture it!
Reply by ●August 19, 20042004-08-19
Michael N. Moran wrote:> Gary Kato wrote: >>>All of that long winded non-sense to say that >>>I agree the best tools include the whiteboard >>>and markers ;-) >>> >> >> >> And don't forget a camera or a white board scanner to capture it! > > The camera has never worked very well for me. > > I usually sit down with the laptop and capture > to Visio, or more recently Open Office Draw. > > I've always lusted after one of those huge white > boards with the vector drawing capture. I have > no experience with their *actual* usability, however. > >I've used both - one a 4'x8' with printer attached and one with wireless pens with a reciever suction cupped to the side. The printer one was the best. The wireless one ... the rule was write slow and big for it to capture with any legibility Jim