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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. Before using videos in your Flash project, you would need to encode them in a format compatible with Adobe Flash (FLV or MPEG-4). However, often we find videos not being used optimally.

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Create Awesome eLearning Games (Flash and HTML 5)

eLearning Brothers

The main idea is that you can download the sources files, open them in the appropriate software, and then add your content. Game formats available: Flash (Actionscript 2 and 3) – You download the.fla source file for the game and open/edit them in Adobe Flash software. Flash (Actionscript 2 and 3).

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eLearning: Adding Videos to eLearning. The Results

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Your corporate media server (or a server you created on your own). Most developers (54%) store the videos on their computer or server.    If you set up your own media server, tell us your story. Specifically, what hardware and software did you use? Video stored on your computer or network.

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Weekly Bookmarks (5/9/10)

Experiencing eLearning

Myths about video: Macs are better, Flash is best, Final Cut Pro is the only adequate software, you must have a streaming server, everything must be able to play on an iPhone. Summary of common questions/myths with research answers. tags : communication , visualcommunication. tags : video , e-learning. Posted from Diigo.

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SaaS LMS vs Self-Hosted LMS: Why SaaS for eLearning is Best

Academy of Mine

It seems like just yesterday laptops were still being made with cd rom drives, and flash drives were still the go-to solution for moving data from one device to the next. SaaS stands for Service as a software and a SaaS LMS is a cloud-based system. A self-hosted LMS is a software application that you install on your own server.

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Developing An eLearning Player?

Upside Learning

This post is based on our experience with development of Flash based eLearning players over the years. Adobe’s Flash Professional is widely used for eLearning development but some organizations don’t allow running Flash Player or any other 3 rd party plug-ins for that matter in their web browsers.

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Security Awareness Tips for LMS Administrators

Web Courseworks

As the software industry continues to move away from purchased client/server applications and toward cloud-based SaaS (software as a service) solutions, LMS administrators must rethink the means that they employ to keep their system free from attack, and most importantly, keep their data secure. Keeping Your SaaS Data Secure.

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