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Q&A: Audio in Captivate

Adobe Captivate

Recently I answered several questions about Audio in Captivate. Although personally I mostly use Adobe Audition to record and edit audio clips for Captivate, this blog will focus only on the Audio features within Captivate. In the past I have posted several articles about audio. Tips here were not yet published.

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Reduce the Size of a Captivate Project

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Adobe's Mukul Vinay Lele has written an article that includes a workaround for bloated project sizes that you might encounter in your Captivate projects. We worked on it and have found out that the issue is seen because of the audio files (.wav wav and.mp3 files). Thanks Paul for raising the issue.

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7 Free Audio Editors for Your E-Learning Courses

Rapid eLearning

Even though many elearning applications have their own audio tools, I usually don’t use them. I may for quick projects, but generally, I like to keep my audio production separate from my elearning course production. It provides more control over the audio files and dedicated audio editing software tends to have more features.

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17 Best Royalty-Free Music Sites for Video Courses

learnWorlds

And while it may be obvious that your course should offer highly educational and engaging content with a balance between video and text, what about the audio? We’re talking about adding some flair to your videos with audio. Audio Jungle AudioJungle is part of the Envato Market, where you can find top-quality music starting from $1.

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Friday Finds — Learning Science, Expert Generalists, Our Knowingness Problem

Mike Taylor

Learn more → Becoming an Expert Generalist The article by Nick DeWilde explains how being an expert generalist can give you a unique advantage in today’s fast-changing and complex world. The Neovation Learning Hub can become your source of eLearning articles without the sales pitch! link] play.ht

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Using Text-to-Speech in an eLearning Course

Tony Karrer

A general approach in which developers use any standard authoring tool such as Articulate or Lectora and use stand-alone TTS on-demand services/products to create audio files that are then linked or embedded in the presentation. In terms of taking the resulting audio files and using them via an authoring tool, the level of effort is similar.

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Tips for Working with E-Learning Voice-Over Talent

E-learning Uncovered

MP3 and WAV are both popular audio file types that work with the four major e-learning authoring tools. If you’re not sure which audio file type to use, check out this article , which describes the differences among the major types. Indicate your naming preferences for each audio file. For example, audio file 1-2.MP3

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