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Acquistions – Someone had an idea

eLearning 24-7

Instead, it was someone from Macromedia Dreamweaver, which is software for building websites. LTG, Macromedia, Adobe, and Smart ideas (for the most part) LTG acquiring Rustici (makers of the SCORM engine and Watershed LRS, among other items) is a great idea. At the time, I hated it. The people who had PL loved it. Two cheers!

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How to Prepare for the End of the Flash

Magic EdTech

These organizations have been developing Flash content for education since Macromedia offered Flash 1.0 In 1996, Macromedia bought FutureSplash and renamed it Flash. During its heyday, Flash was the “be all and end all” for web interactivity and it was at this time that Adobe bought Macromedia. The Technology Solution: HTML5.

Flash 68
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10 Reasons to Join The eLearning Guild

Web Courseworks

Colleges were just starting to offer Photoshop courses and were just including HTML and Macromedia in their curriculum. The eLearning Guild pens a newsletter called Learning Solutions Magazine , the industry’s oldest and most trusted source of practical information on enterprise-wide learning. Get Discovered.

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Adobe Captivate Prime: Adobe's Best LMS Effort to Date

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

This workflow has been around for over 10 years from Adobe (well, technically Presedia, then Macromedia, and then Adobe Systems). If you're not familiar with this solution, that's fine, we've now got Adobe Captivate Prime. In the image below you can see the Publish options in Adobe Captivate 9.

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How to Make E-Learning So People Really Learn: Q&A With Ethan Edwards

ATD Learning Technologies

Ethan has been designing online instruction for almost 25 years, beginning with work at the PLATO laboratory at the University of Illinois, continuing through positions at Authorware, Macromedia, Microsoft, and as a consultant with a host of top companies in the United States and abroad. ” So what’s the solution?

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In Memory – Corporate Instructional Designers

eLearning 24-7

A product called Macromedia Flash (being used with web sites) became a go to for course development. Macromedia Dreamweaver came out with templates. The idea of a rapid content authoring tool, whereas anyone could build a course quickly was appalling to everyone who built courses. I used DazzlerMax. Storyboards were common.

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Innovators' Dilemma in Learning/eLearning

Tony Karrer

If anything, I would expect right now that the biggest shift will be towards more free, open-source solutions that provide roughly the same functionality that are in the commercial tools today. Does anyone from Saba, SumTotal, Adobe/Macromedia/eHelp, Lectora, etc. If you look at what's happening with Web 2.0, What will be the source?