article thumbnail

mLearning: The Time is Now

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Before jumping in, consider these points from Jason Bickle's eLearning Devcon 2011 session, Design Approaches for Adapting Content for mLearning. In what may be another boon for mLearning, last week Google released a beta tool called Swiffy , a free Flash to HTML5 converter. Do you have. Fingers crossed!

article thumbnail

Learning Content in Crisis? The How and Why of Moving from Flash to HTML5

gomo learning

The Adobe Flash format, once the primary standard for learning content, will no longer be supported after December 31st 2020. You may still have useful Flash learning content in your curriculum or in your archives. So why is Flash going away, what is going to happen to it, and what should you do with it? of all sites in 2011?

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

M-Learning: Landscape Changer: E-Reader

eLearning 24-7

How many other e-readers will increase their screen size by the end of 2011? Umm, lets see: Swf (yes, Flash and not Flash lite either) – An e-reader already boosts this as a new feature into the marketplace. ″ Now, a new player hit the market with a 10.7″ ″ screen. File Formats. So long monopoly.

article thumbnail

2010: mLearning Year in Review

mLearning Trends

lack of Flash support). There will certainly be 30+ tablet devices to choose from by mid 2011 and all will help to grow the market and a select few will actually succeed as products. The arrival of Adobe's Flash Player v10.1 Validated (“Triple”). Not Validated ("Stikeout").