article thumbnail

eLearning Development: 4 Tech Considerations When Using Videos

Upside Learning

Don’t double compress videos – use uncompressed or lossless formats when compressing to FLV format. Encoding videos to FLV. Before using videos in your Flash project, you would need to encode them in a format compatible with Adobe Flash (FLV or MPEG-4). Supported source formats are: asf, avi, dv, mov, mp4, mpg, mpeg, wmv.

FLV 186
article thumbnail

Is HTML5 Ready for eLearning Development?

Upside Learning

Last week, while justifying Apple’s refusal to allow Flash player on iPhone/iPad, Steve Jobs wrote– “ New open standards created in the mobile era, such as HTML5, will win on mobile devices (and PCs too) ”. On the other hand, Flash supports FLV/FV4 formats and those are not browser dependent.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

5 Best Practices of creating an eLearning Video

Wizcabin

While some experts can use videos to create engaging e-learning effectively, some aren’t so good at it. Create a good storyboard. Creating a good storyboard will assist you to see how every part of your video will look. Ensure you create it in such a way that reflects every intention you have about the e-learning video.

Video 74
article thumbnail

ADOBE CAPTIVATE: Free Matching Images and Videos

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

During the video portion of the class, we import a Flash Video (flv) which students love because without the background color in the video, it's possible to include an animated guide throughout a lesson. I quickly discovered, much to my delight, that Flash Video (flv) is one of the available download formats.

article thumbnail

The Open Screen Project – Will It Succeed?

Upside Learning

The Open Screen Project was started to help create a singular experience on multiple devices (using Flash) be it Computers, Mobiles, TV or Game consoles. The most important one is Adobe removing restrictions on SWF and FLV/F4V specifications. Adobe recently announced AIR for Mobile devices. What’s Adobe’s contribution?

article thumbnail

Using Lectora to Sync Audio

Integrated Learnings

Import Audio as an FLV File. This is where you will select the audio you created for the page. The format of the audio file is important because only Flash Video (FLV) files can be used for syncing events to audio. Open up a new blank project and let's look at the steps involved when using Lectora to sync audio.

Lectora 131
article thumbnail

How to Add Closed Captions to Video and Audio in Lectora

Trivantis

This blog will show you step by step how to create and add closed captions to Lectora and Lectora Online titles. Lectora and Lectora Online support adding captions to FLV and MP4 video formats. Step B: Create Your Caption File. There are a couple of different ways to create your caption file. Click Convert to MP4.

Lectora 82