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Adobe Captivate & RoboHelp: Incorporate eLearning within a Help System

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

For instance, I use Adobe Captivate to create most of my eLearning content, and Adobe RoboHelp to create my Help Systems. It wasn't all that long ago that eLearning content and Help Systems served different roles and different audiences. Open or create a topic and choose  Import > Adobe Captivate Demo.

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Adobe Captivate 6: HTML5 At Last!

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

by Kevin Siegel    You've probably heard by now that Adobe released Adobe Captivate 6 late last week. Publishing in Captivate takes your source content and outputs it into a format that can be consumed (viewed) by the learner. As an alternative to publishing a SWF, you can publish as HTML5. This week, HTML5.

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Adobe Captivate 5.5: Lowering the Size of Published SWFs

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

I often hear from Captivate developers who are required to output smaller and smaller SWFs, while making their lessons more and more interactive. Fortunately, adding interactivity to a lesson does not negatively impact the size of the published SWF. However, nothing will bloat a published SWF quite like audio.

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Discovering Adobe InDesign for eLearning

Integrated Learnings

With Adobe Captivate , you can create some great system simulations. Flash Player (SWF). One problem that I did run into with InDesign was using Flash (SWF) files imbedded into the document. Your design of the document would be much simpler, so the end user could easily print it for future reference.

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Rapid eLearning Through Software Simulations And Screencasts

Upside Learning

The main reason was that such simulation tools are not always used for developing just any type of learning but focused on training content creation for a specific software application or system. Unlike screen capturing tools, the published output is not just a passive video, but is in a fully interactive format such as Flash SWF.

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TEACHING ONLINE: True eLearning Integration via Adobe Connect

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

First, create the eLearning content in Adobe Captivate, and then publish as an SWF.     Click the Browse My Computer button and upload the SWF you published with Captivate. In the image below, I’ve already uploaded a SWF I created with Captivate called UsingNotepad.

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Adobe Captivate – The Ideal Systems Training Development Tool

CommLab India

Adobe Captivate is the solution for this. Here are the steps to create software simulations with Adobe Captivate. Install the latest version of Adobe Captivate in your system and open it (the current version is Adobe Captivate 9). You can publish the simulation to the SWF and HTML formats, together or individually.