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Adobe Captivate: When It Comes to Images, Choose Your Quality

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Captivate offers four image quality levels you can specify. While your published SWF will be smaller when compared to using the other modes listed here, this setting will lower the quality of the published images so much, you may not like it. Note: Using the Low (8-bit) option, JPEG images will be published as JPEGs.

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Adobe Captivate 5.5: Lowering the Size of Published SWFs

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Fortunately, adding interactivity to a lesson does not negatively impact the size of the published SWF. Rather, imported assets such as audio, video and images are the main culprits behind SWF bloat. There are some things that you can do while working in Captivate that may lower the size of the published SWF.

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Adobe Captivate 5: Preload Your Corporate Brand

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

In fact, the learner will have to wait for a specific percentage of the SWF to downloaded. The time it takes for that percentage to be reached depends on two things: the size of the SWF you published and the speed of the learner's internet connection. I typically set my Preloader % to 50. Still using Adobe Captivate 4 ?