Remove blogs
Remove Adobe Remove Flash Player Remove SWF Remove Synchronous
article thumbnail

CP2019’s Tiny Gems

Adobe Captivate

I suppose all developers are aware that the final death of Flash Player, SWF output will be there sooner than expected. For the ‘blank’ projectstThe big button Preview has changed the sequence of the methods and clarified that the former ‘Preview in Browser (F12)’ is creating a temporary SWF.

SWF 40
article thumbnail

Two weeks with Captivate 2017

Adobe Captivate

If you did visit my blog in the past, you know that I prefer to wait a while before posting my first impressions. In Captivate 2017 this is no longer necessary, thanks to the Adobe team! If Flash player is enabled in your browser, you can test this movie (SWF) online in my personal blog.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Two weeks with Captivate 2017

Adobe Captivate

If you did visit my blog in the past, you know that I prefer to wait a while before posting my first impressions. In Captivate 2017 this is no longer necessary, thanks to the Adobe team! If Flash player is enabled in your browser, you can test this movie (SWF) online in my personal blog.

article thumbnail

Reflections on Captivate 2017

Adobe Captivate

If you did visit my blog in the past, you know that I prefer to wait a while before posting my first impressions. In Captivate 2017 this is no longer necessary, thanks to the Adobe team! If Flash player is enabled in your browser, you can test this movie (SWF) online in my personal blog.

article thumbnail

Interactivity in Software Tutorials?

Adobe Captivate

Maybe a blog, explaining why I am wondering about the use of Captivate for the creation of software tutorials, explaining the three possible workflows with growing level of interactivity can lead to some feedback anyway. Those are SWF-based but will be converted to MP4 when publishing to HTML5. appeared first on eLearning.

article thumbnail

2010: mLearning Year in Review

mLearning Trends

OnPoint stepped up to plate here – to satiate pent-up demand in some and spark new interest in others – by introducing an integrated set of social features that blend “formal with informal” with support for PRIVATE mobile discussion forums, access to blogs and wikis, and support for mobile captured/user-generated content.