Remove 2004 Remove Platform Remove Player Remove PPT
article thumbnail

What is SCORM? A Complete Guide on SCORM Files and Packaging

learnWorlds

SCORM 2004 (formerly known as 1.3). SCORM 2004 is the latest version of the standard used today. The downside of the 2004 version is that fewer LMS vendors support it due to its complexity. These tools can help you convert a ppt file into a SCORM file with ease: iSpring Suite. SCORM 1.2, Articulate 360 Studio.

SCORM 52
article thumbnail

The Latest: Rapid Content Authoring Tool Market

eLearning 24-7

PowerPoint – Ability to integrate or use PPT in your courses. Some vendors push heavily on PPT, implying that a great WBT is really a PPT converted to Flash. Over 98% of the LMS/LCMS/learning platform have at least one compliance standard, so why use a RCAT that doesn’t? It isn’t. Disgusting. .

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Ghost Edition – Top 10 Authoring Tools for 2013

eLearning 24-7

SCORM 2004. Uses a PowerPoint like layout, albeit it shows a hierarchy approach which many people will like – so if you think this is nothing more than PPT in appearance – trust me it is not. Claro continues to improve their product and add features to turn it into a true all in one authoring tool platform.

article thumbnail

Best of the Best: Content Authoring Tools

eLearning 24-7

Feature sets – they have to be more than PPT to Flash or add an audio clip and video clip to the course. Works across multiple platforms, SCORM, learning object generator and more. 4 Kookabura Studios – Professional Presenter X – another fav of mine back in 2010 and still a strong player in 2011.

article thumbnail

E-learning: A simpler approach, please?

Coorpacademy

First, it’s an old standard since its last official update was in 2004, so what it offers is not suitable for the way we work with content today. In e-learning, we never progressed beyond the SCORM view of the world and that dominant PPT metaphor. But that’s what we just don’t really do yet in the e-learning world.