Remove 2015 Remove Evalution Remove Flash to HTML5 Conversion Remove Gamification
article thumbnail

Top 50 eLearning Posts For 2011

Upside Learning

The Gamification Of SAP. Billion By 2015. Is the iPad Driving eLearning Towards HTML5? Flash For Mobile Is Dead. Flash For Mobile Is Dead. How Suitable Is HTML5 For Mobile Learning? Measuring And Evaluating Learning – The Top Skill For L&D Teams. Mobile Learning In The Workplace – Survey.

article thumbnail

JOE GANCI – CRYSTAL BALLING WITH LEARNNOVATORS

Learnnovators

As an example, HTML5 was added to most development tools only after it was clear that Flash was on its way out and as it became evident that more people were browsing the web on their mobile devices than on their desktop computers. Problems include smaller screens, no roll-over interactions, and no Flash animations.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Joe Ganci – Crystal Balling with Learnnovators

Learnnovators

As an example, HTML5 was added to most development tools only after it was clear that Flash was on its way out and as it became evident that more people were browsing the web on their mobile devices than on their desktop computers. Problems include smaller screens, no roll-over interactions, and no Flash animations.

article thumbnail

2016 eLearning Hype Curve Predictions

Web Courseworks

Quick hits – sorting through recent entries in the Innovation Trigger bin: Gamification: Not serious games or games for learning, but “true gamification.” ” We’re putting this in here out of respect for WCW visionary David Wipperfurth, who claims that no one has done real gamification yet in eLearning.

article thumbnail

2016 eLearning Hype Curve Predictions

Web Courseworks

Quick hits – sorting through recent entries in the Innovation Trigger bin: Gamification: Not serious games or games for learning, but “true gamification.” ” We’re putting this in here out of respect for WCW visionary David Wipperfurth, who claims that no one has done real gamification yet in eLearning.