Remove 2010 Remove Flash Player Remove Mobile Remove Player
article thumbnail

Adobe AIR & Flash Player 10.1– How it Can Benefit Mobile Learning

Upside Learning

On Feb 15, 2010, at Mobile World Congress 2010, Adobe announced Adobe AIR for mobile devices, a consistent runtime for standalone applications which is an outcome of Adobe initiated Open-Screen project. To begin with it will be available on Android in 2010. Adobe also unveiled Flash platform 10.1

article thumbnail

HTML5 in E-learning – Signaling the End of the Flash Player

CommLab India

For years, the Flash Player reigned supreme in the world of e-learning. It seemed that the Flash Player was destined to rule the technology-enabled learning world. Apple’s products, the iPhone and the iPad, had (and continue to have) a large share of the mobile device market. You have no such problems with HTML5.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

The Sound of Silence | Social Learning Blog

Dashe & Thomson

For an excellent illustration of this problem, check out this great example provided by the always-interesting Cathy Moore (click the image to launch the Flash player): Courtesy of [link] So, why does narration in eLearning frequently do nothing more than parrot back what’s written on the screen? Properly d. All Rights Reserved.

article thumbnail

June 2010 Monthly Roundup: 10 Most Popular Posts

Upside Learning

Discusses some rapid authoring tools that let authors develop content targeted at mobile devices. Ten Must-Have Features In A Mobile-LMS. The future of eLearning is mobile. This post lists 10 useful (need to have) features in a mobile version of an LMS (segregated into Learner and Administrator functions). Smokescreen.

article thumbnail

HTML5 Fans Rejoice – Adobe Ditches Flash Player on Mobile Devices

eLearning 24-7

Especially for us fans of HTML5 who knew in our hearts of hearts that it was a superior product to Flash. 9th, that it is abandoning its work on Flash for mobile devices and instead focusing on mobile development of development of HTML5 for mobile. HTML5: Let the Games Begin – written in May 2010.

article thumbnail

Top Learning, Technology & Media Links: Weekly Digest – 3

Upside Learning

63 Great eLearning Posts And Hottest Topics For November 2010. Compilation of 63 of the best eLearning posts; also lists the hottest topics for November 2010. A Study Of Trends In Mobile Design. Flash Player 10.2 Upon the solid groundwork laid by the Flash Player 10.1 Read it here. Read it here.

article thumbnail

How to Convert your Content from Flash to HTML5?

Hurix Digital

In 2017, Adobe had made a formal announcement stating that by 2020, the company would no longer support the flash player plug-in. Google and Microsoft too have announced their intention to disable the plug-in in their browsers by early next year, thus bringing the curtains down for Flash. What exactly is Flash?