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Why Flash to HTML5 Conversion is Essential for Your Flash-based Course’s Survival

Brilliant Teams

Why Flash to HTML5 Conversion is Essential for Your Flash-based Course's Survival The world of online education has undergone a seismic shift in recent years. One such transformation is the shift from Flash to HTML5 for course content delivery. Are you looking for eLearning Solutions?

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Legacy eLearning

CourseArc

“Legacy eLearning” refers to any training that was developed using software that is outdated, unsupported, or incompatible with current learning systems. For example, Adobe Flash , which was once popular for eLearning content, is now incompatible with most mobile devices, including Android and iOS.

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So…How Do You Build eLearning For iPads?

Upside Learning

Now that we have thought about what we can do with our existing courseware let’s think about building some new eLearning and what’s all the fuss about HTML5. Not surprisingly, there is a plethora of rapid authoring tools available today that do this. So what’s the fuss about HTML5?

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How to Pick the Best Authoring Tool to Convert Legacy E-Learning Courses

CommLab India

A legacy e-learning course refers to an online course developed using Flash, Dreamweaver, XML/HTML, JavaScript or earlier versions of rapid authoring tools. These tools are dated and cannot meet today’s high technological standards. Converting a legacy course to the latest HTML5 can be a tricky process.

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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. Flash will be allowed to die in 2020 as Adobe ceases to support the standard.

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8 reasons for using HTML5 for authoring eLearning course

Adobe Captivate

Adobe Flash has been a productive tool for authoring these courses. But, it suffered from the drawback that OS platforms of latest handheld devices don’t extend support for Flash. HTML5 has superseded Flash as a viable option for authoring eLearning courses because it is supported by all smartphones and tablets.

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Creating Accessible eLearning with Articulate Storyline 360

B Online Learning

is a stable, referenceable technical standard. There’s two factors that contribute to the creation of accessible eLearning – the authoring tool which has built-in accessibility functions and our design decisions (that include the colours, fonts images and interactions that we include). It works in Flash and HTML5 courses.