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8 reasons for using HTML5 for authoring eLearning course

Adobe Captivate

Adobe Flash has been a productive tool for authoring these courses. But, it suffered from the drawback that OS platforms of latest handheld devices don’t extend support for Flash. HTML5 has superseded Flash as a viable option for authoring eLearning courses because it is supported by all smartphones and tablets.

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Flash is Dead: Long Live HTML5 for eLearning

LearnUpon

For the latter half of Flash’s history, it has been plagued with many very serious security bugs that allowed total control of a user’s device by simply visiting a website with some Flash content. The second reason is the hardware requirements Flash demands to play heavily animated or video content. The rise of HTML5?

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Aurion Connections – What We Learned

LearnUpon

You’re probably aware that Adobe announced earlier this year that they would stop supporting and distributing their Flash Player in 2020. This will have a massive impact on the world of eLearning as Flash has been the preferred output standard for eLearning content for many years. Do you still have a license for it?

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My 2012 Enterprise mLearning Predictions Recap

mLearning Trends

Back on December 30 2011, I scoped eight predictions ranging from hardware/software to content types and authoring tools to macro-level mobility trends our team felt would influence the market for mLearning products and services for the year and I wasn’t disappointed (or much surprised) about how it all played out.

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Enterprise Mobile Learning 2011 - Year in Review

mLearning Trends

One year ago today, I offered nine predictions running the gamut of hardware, software, industry players and general market movements based on trends we were experiencing in the commercial mobile learning marketplace; here’s my analysis of where these predictions landed twelve months later. Authoring Tools Will Evolve.

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Enterprise mLearning Predictions for 2011

mLearning Trends

After years of BlackBerry dominance in the pockets and purses of enterprise personnel, iOS (Apple) and Android -based mobile phones and tablet devices will supplant RIM-supplied smartphones as the primary desired (and likely used) smart devices for mobile learning – at least in North America. Authoring Tools Will Evolve.

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2010: mLearning Year in Review

mLearning Trends

Rather than getting easier, the mlearning landscape will actually grow wider/deeper and far more complex as enterprises are forced to include/support several disparate mobile devices and changing end user demands; this scenario will drive further demand for enterprise-grade content authoring and delivery platforms for mobile learning.