article thumbnail

eLearning Development: 4 Tech Considerations When Using Videos

Upside Learning

With increasing bandwidths and better compression techniques available, use of videos in Flash platform based eLearning courses is on the rise. However, often we find videos not being used optimally. Here are a few technical aspects to keep in mind when working with videos. Choosing source video.

FLV 186
article thumbnail

New CutOut People Videos

eLearning Brothers

Do you want to add a little more action to your eLearning courses? We just released CutOut People Videos. These video people can be used as: content experts, course presenters, clients, managers, and much more. Each set of videos includes: flv and.mp4 files. 12+ different video poses and emotions.

FLV 95
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

The Open Screen Project – Will It Succeed?

Upside Learning

There are several futuristic videos about how it will work available at [link]. The most important one is Adobe removing restrictions on SWF and FLV/F4V specifications. Here is a latest video released by Adobe demonstrating Flash enabled “full” web experience on HP Slate device. What’s Adobe’s contribution?

article thumbnail

5 Best Practices of creating an eLearning Video

Wizcabin

Learners mostly laud e-learning videos because of its positive impact on online training. While some experts can use videos to create engaging e-learning effectively, some aren’t so good at it. Below are the e-learning video best practices to assist educators in developing effective and engaging training.

Video 74
article thumbnail

How to Add Closed Captions to Video and Audio in Lectora

Trivantis

Web accessibility is an important part of the development process that should be considered with your initial course design. Part I: How to Add Closed Captions to Video Files. Step A: Insert Your Video File into Lectora/Lectora Online. Browse for and select the desired video file. Click Convert to MP4.

Lectora 82
article thumbnail

Video Delivery Types in Captivate

Adobe Captivate

One of the most important factors to think about while using Videos in learning courses is how the video will be delivered to the learner. Captivate supports the following types of Video Delivery : Progressive download, RTMP Streaming, Flash Video Streaming Service (FVSS). Video Hosting. RTMP Streaming.

article thumbnail

HTML5 and SWF

Adobe Captivate

What’s the easiest way to determine if a Captivate 9 course contains things that require Flash? We used to import all videos for our modules in the .flv flv format. Will.flv files work in HTML5 courses? Which if your current features (e.g., drag and drop) rely on swf??

SWF 45