Remove Apple Remove Flash Player Remove iPad Remove Product
article thumbnail

Apple Vs Adobe: Impact On Mobile Learning Development

Upside Learning

The war between Adobe and Apple just got hotter. Apple has revised the Developer Program License Agreement to ban the use of cross compiler tools like Unity3d, Appcelerator’s Titanium, Adobe’s Flash CS5 etc. for developing iPhone and iPad applications. With the announcement of iPhone OS 4.0 or AIR 2.0.

Apple 205
article thumbnail

Discovering Adobe InDesign for eLearning

Integrated Learnings

Adobe InDesign is a tool for creating those things that partner with your eLearning courses, such as resource guides or job aids.You can make them interactive for web deployment and include elements such as Flash files, videos or links. Flash Professional (FLA). Flash Player (SWF). What InDesign Can Do.

Adobe 126
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

TechSmith Camtasia Studio 8: One Smart Player

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Although your learners will not need Camtasia installed on their computer to use a SWF, they will need a modern web browser and the free Adobe Flash Player (www.adobe.com). According to Adobe, the Flash Player is installed on most of the world's computers.   window, select  MP4-Flash/HTML5 player.

Player 159
article thumbnail

Some FAQs about Adobe’s announcements yesterday

Steve Howard

Adobe announced to increase its efforts on HTML5, use of the Flash Player for applications (packaged with AIR) and specific desktop browsing use cases including premium video and console-quality gaming. As a result, Adobe will no longer develop Flash Player for mobile web browsers. What is it that Adobe is announcing?

article thumbnail

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 HTML5 has superseded Flash as a viable option for authoring eLearning courses because it is supported by all smartphones and tablets.

article thumbnail

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.

article thumbnail

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. On Target But.