Shared whiteboard markers as synedoche for what happens when people don't take care of a shared common resource.
(No, I don't know why people don't throw out the markers that don't write, but they don't.)
I don't think it's inevitable, but I also have no idea what is going on in people's heads when they put the non-writing markers back on the whiteboard tray.

@yvonnezlam Oddly, I looked into this. I ran a co-working office in Madison for a decade and buildup of dry markers was a chronic nuisance. Ultimately I resolved it by just testing them all on the regular, but I did ask around and it came down to "I wasn't sure others wouldn't use it still" plus there wasn't a place to put it other than the trash ๐Ÿ—‘๏ธ

Everyone had a personal standard for "this marker sucks" that they believed too strict, so they didn't want to trash markers good enough for others

@gl33p @yvonnezlam I wonder if you had a dry marker rehydration bin labeled (actually trash) people would feel like they're doing a good thing rather than wasteful.
@axxl @gl33p Ooh, that would be a fun experiment...
@yvonnezlam @axxl โ€œWe send them to a young couple in Middleton who refill markers and inkjet cartridges and stuffโ€ ๐Ÿ˜
@gl33p @yvonnezlam the equivalent of "they go to the marker farm up state"?

@axxl This got dark in a hurry!

(But I still laughed ๐Ÿ˜…)

@yvonnezlam