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The Demise of the Flash Player – What Do I Do Now?

Adobe Captivate

Specifically, we will stop updating and distributing the Flash Player at the end of 2020 and encourage content creators to migrate any existing Flash content to these new open formats. This announcement has a major impact on any organization which has e-learning courses published to run in Adobe Flash player.

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Adobe Captivate 6: HTML5 At Last!

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Currently the most common way to publish a Captivate project is as a Flash SWF, an excellent solution because SWF files can be used by the vast majority of the world's personal computers, browsers and operating systems. According to Adobe, the Flash Player is installed on the vast majority of the word's computers.

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

Illumen Group

Popular web browsers have already discussed their plans to no longer support the Flash plugin. And your mobile devices already can’t support it. At this point, there’s very little that Flash can do that HTML5 can’t handle. The number of companies that rely on Flash has steadily decreased over the last few years.

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Developing An eLearning Player?

Upside Learning

Choose the right technology – before you start developing an eLearning player it’s important to decide on the development tool and technology. Test on actual environment – environment is the combination of hosting server and end user’s machine. Related posts: Adobe AIR & Flash Player 10.1–

Player 202
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10 PPT to SCORM Converters

Ed App

Features: LMS, Authoring tool, SCORM Compliant, Editable templates, Gamification, Mobile friendly, and much more. The software is great and all, but it needs to be more mobile-friendly. With this program, users can generate either 1 solid small web format file (SWF) or a series of SWF files. Price: Free. Price: US $199.

PPT 40
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Adobe Captivate 6: Delivering Standalone eLearning Lessons

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

If the learner is going to access the lesson over the internet (either from a web server or an LMS), publishing SWF and/or HTML5 is the way to go. If you decide to publish a SWF, the learner will use a web browser to access the lesson. Just remember that neither SWF nor HTML5 are good standalone options.

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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”).