I like to draw -- well, scribble -- while working with other people; that works well in my office, where I have a huge whiteboard. But if the other people are on the other end of a phone line, it's not so good.

I played with skrbl.com, which isn't bad (though I couldn't make it work with Safari or Chrome), but it's not ideal. What is?

(Oh...and I need to be able to work with people who aren't using Windows.)

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Let's hear it for the classic, "real" whiteboard on the wall with markers. That's my favorite but it has no remote capabilities except for leaving a message for someone else at a later point in time when you won't be on premises. Then it's the exact same thing. – John K Oct 16 '10 at 1:28
That's my favorite, too, but when you need remote capabilities, there are tradeoffs to be made. sigh Wish someone would get teleportation up and running! – David Singer Oct 27 '10 at 23:24
Even skribl.com seems to have some major issues. The online demo is working, but I am unable to sign up for a new account. All in all, most tools referenced in this thread has either been bought or has gone out of business. – sonstabo Jan 14 '11 at 12:47
@ David : I'm currently working on a Teleporter but my colleague is in another country. All we need is a remote white board to finish our collaboration! – Clay Nichols Feb 22 at 22:32
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10 Answers

Online webconferencing with DimDim is great. They've a whiteboard tool as well.

Another one which comes to mind is Adobe Connect, but it's not free.

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Hope you get more votes for this DimDim is awesome, free for up to 20 people so that should be enough for a decent sized team meeting. – Wally Lawless Nov 30 '09 at 14:47
DimDim.com: Dimdim has been acquired by Salesforce.com. – sonstabo Jan 14 '11 at 12:08
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I came over this one that seems pretty good: http://www.dabbleboard.com/. Works online, can invite guests, store to different formats, remove part of the drawings, etc. Also contains video and sound.

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Looks like someone got usability right with whiteboarding. Looks very nice. – Clay Nichols Feb 22 at 22:28
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MS SharedView is quite cool, although perhaps a bit overkill if you just want whiteboard.

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I cannot even find the white board functionality with SharedView??! – sonstabo Jan 14 '11 at 12:20
SharedView was discontinued in 2012. – Clay Nichols Feb 23 at 0:23
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Etherpad was bought by Google and you can now collaborate on Google Drawings, which looks pretty good.

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If you don't care about the actual drawing part then http://etherpad.com is quite amazing -- totally realtime, dirt simple collaborative editing. Far superior to, say, google docs. They're in closed beta now but you can try one out here: http://etherpad.com/UGqfsZQxRH

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Check out ZoomIt.

In addition to magnifying (and letting you annotate) the screen,you can also simply annotate the screen without magnifcation. When teaching .NET, it's great to be able to literally turn the code or the UI into a whiteboard and annotate over it. It's also nice to use ZoomIt over PowerPoints. Used in conjunction with SnagIt, it's also easy to save these "whiteboards."

Someone here recommended the Bamboo stylus to me and it works great (I use the medium sized one) with ZoomIt.

Having said all that, I didn't know about Skrbl and am adding it to my kitbag! Thanks for that.

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@Kevin -- thanks. I've used those tools, but they are half-duplex with a lot of overhead in handing off control (at least when I've used them). Skrbl was much more fluid, closer to having two people working at the same whiteboard at the same time. – David Singer Jan 20 at 15:39
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The only one I have used is included with the excelent base camp from 37Signals.

www.37signals.com

I use it every week....

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I have find a white board at http://webdeginer.blogspot.com/2010/05/shared-white-board.html, it's too nice yaar, but he selling it......... hmmmm :(

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The iPad is really the perfect device for doing this kind of digital/shared whiteboard work.

I've created a shared whiteboard iPad app (Mac version coming soon, Windows/Linux app after that) that lets you share a zoomable drawing space. It even works while offline, syncing up with other's changes once you get back online.

It's called SyncSpace and is available from http://infinitekind.com/

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Personally, I prefer MSPaint ;)

When working with someone remotely, though, pretty much any conference tool (NetMeeting, web-based conference apps, or even MSN Messenger) all typically have whiteboard capabilities.

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