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Qarbon Camtasia and Adobe Captivate

Tony Karrer

I will want to have a simple menu system to break up the content into chunks. Qarbon Pros: Less File size. Qarbon seems very easy to use. And I may eventually, but not initially, want to be able to track them under an LMS, i.e., have SCORM tracking. I have been looking into various tools.

Qarbon 100
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Best of the Best: Content Authoring Tools

eLearning 24-7

Updated Content Authoring Tool Directory. Considering there are over 120 content authoring tool products in the space, being one of the top ten – puts you IMO – as best of the best. The version you want is the Pro version which comes with Corel Paint Shop Pro, Qarbon Viewlet builder. An additional note.

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eLearning Topics

Tony Karrer

In each case, these are crude in that they look only at what terms people are using in a given content set. And now, because of eLearning Learning , I have a much better way to track these things over a much more interesting content sets. This works across any subset of the content including sources, keywords and arbitrary searches.

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Rapid eLearning Tools

Tony Karrer

PointeCast www.pointecast.com Qarbon www.qarbon.com SCATE www.scate.com Udutu www.udutu.com Atlantic link scored the highest in the shoot-out. I was reminded of the various Brandon Hall shoot-outs. For example, in 2007 PowerPoint to eLearning Shootout they compared: Articulate www.articulate.com Atlantic Link www.atlantic-link.co.uk

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Training Standards

Tony Karrer

What about Adobe products vs. Articulate vs. Qarbon ? Browse eLearning Content at www.elearninglearning.com Where does PowerPoint fit into the standards? Should we be supporting OpenOffice? Where does SCORM fit into the picture? Should we demand that our product support SCORM? already exist in this world.

Standards 100
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The big question: choosing tools

Clive on Learning

there is plenty that can go wrong when the content is scattered on different computers. Experience shows that, for large projects involving teams of specialists (project managers, instructional designers, graphics people, subject experts, testers, etc.), It's OK to have lots of tools, if you can afford them.

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Rapid e-learning is swimming in too small a pond

Clive on Learning

They both refer to the authors of this rapid content as being SMEs. But has anyone told the rapid content development tool builders? One member of the audience even went as far as to say that they wouldn't let SMEs anywhere near these tools, in case the content they produced reflected badly on the training department.