Remove Audio Remove Developing eLearning Remove Flash to HTML5 Conversion Remove Player
article thumbnail

Is HTML5 Ready for eLearning Development?

Upside Learning

Last week, while justifying Apple’s refusal to allow Flash player on iPhone/iPad, Steve Jobs wrote– “ New open standards created in the mobile era, such as HTML5, will win on mobile devices (and PCs too) ”. A few days before the launch of iPad Apple had released a list of ‘iPad ready’ websites having support for HTML5.

article thumbnail

Updates On HTML5 From Google I/O

Upside Learning

The two announcements which would make the HTML5 development easier and less time consuming are –. In one of my earlier post I have mentioned that HTML5 specifications lack in defining the audio/video format so different browsers support different video [Ogg Theora and H.264]

Google 206
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Flash: an End of an Era – What You Need To Know

Aptara

Flash: an End of an Era – What You Need To Know. In 1996 Macromedia first introduced the Flash Player, developed to play videos, animations, and audio and to support enhanced interactivity in web browsers. Flash Player is not supported on mobile devices (iOS and Android).

article thumbnail

9 Top eLearning Trends of 2017 from 49 Experts

eLearningArt

This hurts established players who are freaking out trying to find new ways to reach customers. A major theme this year in eLearning will be parody with new technology. Similarly, interactive HTML5 video has also been a buzz topic. I see more focus on the visual aspects of eLearning these days, and I could not be happier.