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So…How Do You Build eLearning For iPads?

Upside Learning

A good starting point is our blog post – 5 Rapid Authoring Tools to Publish Courses For Your iPads – where we talk about some of the authoring tools that can be used to develop HTML5 courses for iPads. HTML5 works best with IE10 and browsers like Maxthon, Chrome, Firefox and Safari. Want to explore this some more?

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How Google Classroom Integration Elevates Higher Ed

Harbinger Interactive Learning

Today, educators worldwide are adopting this platform to bring the advantages of digital collaboration, virtual assessments, and paperless sharing to Higher Ed. Higher Ed institutions can adopt the paid Google Workspace for Education Plus version. Google Classroom integration is not new to the world of EdTech tools.

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Does the glove fit? How to make the most of HTML5 in e-learning

Saffron Interactive

This post takes a look at some examples from a recent Saffron course to offer some guidance. So what should drive adoption (aside from wanting to sit with the cool kids)? Chris Milk is a filmmaker and storyteller, using HTML5 not just for its technological functions but as a creative and collaborative tool. Is it right for you?

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Building an advanced eFront theme using CSS3 elements

eFront

images/css_images/gradient.gif) repeat-x top; height:25px; border-top: 0px solid #1f3349; border-bottom: 0px solid #1f3349 } Below you can find several screenshots from the theme (as is rendered on FireFox 3.6) Compatibility Rounded corners are supported by Firefox and Safari. Shaded letters are supported by Safari, Firefox and Opera.

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Flash is Dead: Long Live HTML5 for eLearning

LearnUpon

Adobe Flash technology has helped support the delivery of online multimedia content for nearly two decades. Three popular eLearning formats are also largely dependent on Flash technology for their delivery medium: SCORM, Tin Can (xAPI), and video. eLearning course developers must endure mixed results. The rise of HTML5?

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Ring in the New: Flash E-learning to HTML5

CommLab India

One of the reasons these organizations sympathize with Flash is because of their Flash-based e-learning courses. Now that these courses won’t work on many browsers and devices, they need to be converted into a compatible format; which is HTML5. If this repeats on every slide, learners may lose the interest to complete the course.

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Online multimedia content in e-learning: Flash vs. HTML5

Matrix

The best instructional designers know that they have to create their training courses in ways that attract and engage learners, making them pull the information and ultimately beg for more. A lot of technological advances support this pull method, with most LMSs permitting the embed of multimedia content files in the online courses.