Remove Adobe Captivate Remove Download Remove Server Remove SWF
article thumbnail

"Adobe Captivate 7: The Essentials" Workbook Now Available

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

I'm happy to report that my newest book, "Adobe Captivate 7: The Essentials"  is now available for purchase. "Adobe Captivate 7: The Essentials" is a self-paced training manual that teaches the core Adobe Captivate skills needed to create interactive eLearning and mLearning content.

article thumbnail

Adobe Captivate: Internalize or Externalize?

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

The common way to publish a completed Captivate eLearning video is as a SWF (small web file). When the publish process is complete, you will end up with three files: an HTML file (which is what your learner will need to open the lesson in a web browser), a JavaScript file (called standard.js) and the SWF containing your lesson. 

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Converting Microsoft PowerPoint presentations to HTML5 (web pages)

Adobe Captivate

Products used in this example: Adobe Captivate (2017 release). If you do not have the 2017 release of Adobe Captivate, download a trial version of Captivate. To install Captivate, follow the installation instructions here. Import the presentation in Captivate. Open Adobe Captivate.

article thumbnail

Video Delivery Types in Captivate

Adobe Captivate

Captivate supports the following types of Video Delivery : Progressive download, RTMP Streaming, Flash Video Streaming Service (FVSS). Progressive Download. Can be hosted on any Web Server or Flash Media Server (FMS). Hosting provided by Adobe partners. Now we come to enabling these in Captivate.

article thumbnail

A simple interactive learning object

E-Learning Provocateur

Download the files. Step 2: Import into Captivate. After I got all my images in order, I inserted each one onto its own slide in Adobe Captivate, ensuring the canvas size was exactly the same as the image dimensions (in this case, 1024 x 768). Launch the learning object.

article thumbnail

Australia’s Nobel Laureates

E-Learning Provocateur

Download the files. Step 2: Import into Captivate. After I got all my images in order, I inserted each one onto its own slide in Adobe Captivate 3, ensuring the canvas size was exactly the same as the image dimensions (in this case, 1024 x 768). Launch the learning object.

article thumbnail

Connection Error in Slide Video

Adobe Captivate

I got a chance to closely analyze many of these specific issues and in all the cases it turned out to be server configuration problems. Some background Info: When you insert video into Captivate as Slide Video, it by default is configured to be progressive download. If this works then it is time you talk to your LMS vendor.

Slides 70