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Move from Flash to HTML5 – and Still Keep Your Super Powers!

Illumen Group

Last July, Adobe announced that Flash, the ubiquitous, super-powered website and elearning authoring tool will be phased out by the end of 2020. Popular web browsers have already discussed their plans to no longer support the Flash plugin. And your mobile devices already can’t support it. Consider mobile delivery.

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Hot List - April 1, 2009 to April 11, 2009

Tony Karrer

Solar power for your small and big mobile devices! Although the document focuses on mobile learning for children, you can easily deduct the benefits for all learner groups. The report forecasts especially rapid growth for collaborative e-learning, mobile learning, self-paced learning, and simulations and games. ah, what bliss!

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35 Top eLearning Articles and 6 Hot Topics for March

eLearning Learning Posts

Twitter for Learning – 55 Great Articles - eLearning Technology , March 24, 2010 Collection of articles around how to make effective use of Twitter as a learning tool. Tools For Mobile Learning Development - Upside Learning Blog , March 21, 2010 Some tools which may assist you in developing mobile learning applications.

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Learning Content in Crisis? The How and Why of Moving from Flash to HTML5

gomo learning

The legacy, software-based standard that Flash Player used drained battery significantly faster. Adobe had sole authority over Flash, and only they could control future enhancement and pricing. Though widely discussed as ‘end of support’, the reality is that the cut-off date for Flash will be more of a killing blow.

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Flash To HTML5 – Essential Toolkit For Successful Migration

EI Design

Adoption of mLearning or mobile learning triggers the need to plan for migration of your legacy Flash courses to HTML5 so that they can run seamlessly on tablets and smartphones. However, courses built using Flash (which used to be a rage not too long ago) are a no-no when it comes to mobile-compatibility. Multi-Device Support.

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LMS Review: Litmos

Talented Learning

Its mobile responsive design is built to support employee, extended enterprise and nonprofit learning with a clean user interface and a carefully chosen set of essential options. The admin interface makes it self-explanatory to create content with built-in tools or by importing existing content files. My Overall Assessment.

LMS 60
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2010: mLearning Year in Review

mLearning Trends

As we reach the first anniversary of this blog’s introduction, we thought we’d take stock and figure out how things are going by revisiting our list of predictions for enterprise mobile learning in 2010. On balance, it was an interesting year and there were far more expected outcomes than there were actual surprises. Validated (“Triple”).