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I once bought a can of it to create a home made dry-erase board and it didn't work that well... Smears remained, and you can't clean it of the way you clean of a regular whiteboard.

In addition, the paint I had wasn't magnetic, which is a drawback as well, but there is magnetic paint, so you would have to think about two layers...

Nice hack, but, if renting, the landlord may not appreciate this part:

""" FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

Q: Can the Dry Erase coating be used over a previous Dry Erase surface?

A: Not over an aged surface. Since this product dries to a very hard and glossy surface, the previous coating must be thoroughly sanded to remove the gloss """

This stuff is never very smooth and never looks very clean.

I would recommend calling a glazier and mounting a sheet of tempered glass on the wall with small stainless standoffs. See http://picasaweb.google.com/spolsky/FogCreekSNewOffice#52853... for a picture. Looks great, not expensive, and cleans easily without ever leaving permanent smudges

Can you give an idea of how not expensive it is ? :)
A better idea is to use 4'x8' white melamine coated masonite. Glue or screw it to the walls. It also works great as a table top with fine tip dry erase markers.