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I remember being somewhat underwhelmed when interviewing at a Hedge Fund where they had leather seats decorating a beautiful inlaid wooden table, and not a white board on the whole floor - reminded me of Feynmans comparison of Princeton versus CalTech..

Apparently at Caltech they had a cheap accelerator, but they got great results, because the physicists knew it inside out and tinkered on a daily basis.

I did spend a year doing what Id describe as 'guerrilla white-board driven architecture' where we basically argued hammer and tong for three hours a day, putting ideas up and tearing them down. So every module and code interface was nutted out in detail and usually simplified. It seemed to keep a team of 12 developers focussed on building the same thing. A smaller wb was used to keep a simple list of what the teams working on. Backed up by an open Plone intranet this brought us to delivery. Probably more suited to medium size teams as in game dev. Part of the success was having done a prototype beforehand.

Whenever I see a w/b covered in those cute little pink and green post-it notes, my reaction is that they are embracing agile too rigidly - that the focus is 'process' not action. Its not a white board if theres nowhere to write, right?

So I think the main benefit is simply that the board, being blank, beckons you to draw whatever idea is bouncing around, which you then have to explain...




"reminded me of Feynmans comparison of Princeton versus CalTech.."

Pardon me for being pedantic, but I believe he was comparing MIT and Princeton.


Great writeup. I have a whiteboard in my bedroom so I can visualize ideas. There's something about putting it on the white space that makes them easier to edit and play with.


With loose blank A4 pages and a pencil you don't have to stand up. In my experience, it works better if it's paper printed on the other side picked from the recycle bin.


I find for brainstorming with myself, regular paper (or and roll 11" wide - I found a few for free and they last FOREVER)is best, but with a bunch of people the whiteboard works better.

I am somewhat hampered on the whiteboard by my incredible lack of drawing ability, but it still works out.


I have been contemplating this. I use your method, including the part where the paper has printing on the other side! And I agree: I don't like the part where I would have to stand up to use the whiteboard.

But the erasing part is great, as is the enormous amount of real estate that a big whiteboard gives you.

I've been thinking of trying arrays of index cards and/or post-it notes taped to the desk. But I'm afraid it would cause my thoughts to shape themselves to the contours of tiny little boxes.

I may also give up and create a desk covered in white melamine.




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