I regularly use Quartet non-glass dry erase boards, and have being dying to try the infinity-glass ones! In person, it looks sleek, and with it being frame less, it looks more modern. The board itself is heavy duty, and not some cheap thin glass. It is heavy though, so you will need some help hanging even a smaller one. The biggest difference, compared to a normal dry-erase board, is the glass one looks somewhat dingy, and dull. I'll include a picture of a normal board vs the infinity-glass one side by side. Because it's not bright white, red and blue inks do not stand out as much and look duller. Black ink wasn't much of a difference. I noticed the glass is easier to clean off compared to a regular white board. On my regular white board, after a week of writing and erasing repeatedly, there will be black stains that I have to clean with alcohol. I didn't have that problem with the infinity-glass boards, but, from certain angles, you can see where the board was written on after it's erased and fingerprints. It's not really stains, it's more of like a "smudge" where the words were. (I'll include pictures). So, it still does need to be cleaned, but not as often. The board itself does have metal behind it, so it IS magnetic! Regular fridge magnets won't stick, but heavier duty ones will. My biggest complaint is with the tray that comes with the board. The tray that the board comes with is a little too narrow to hold my eraser, and I have the exact eraser the board recommends. The tray feels cheap and flimsy. The tray is the same length of the board if you put it in portrait position, so if you put the board in a landscape position, the tray only covers a section of the board, and doesn't go the full length of the board, which is kind of annoying. I do recommend this board from home-use, home-office use/small office use. For large classrooms, I think going with a regular white board would be a better option just because of visibility on the white vs glass board.