Remove e-learning vendor Remove Effectiveness Remove Flash to HTML5 Conversion Remove Research
article thumbnail

Go Mobile?

CLO Magazine

Mobile learning is often viewed as the next big thing in learning delivery. But while many organizations have used the method effectively, it is not always the best choice. As mobile learning use matures, organizations are figuring out where it makes the most sense — and, perhaps more important, where it does not.

Mobile 72
article thumbnail

E-Learning End Users Have Spoken – time for the industry to listen

eLearning 24-7

Interestingly, a large portion of LMS vendors have not optimized their products for the iPad/ iPad2 and with the exception of two content authoring tools, HTML5 capabilities, specifically the ability to output a course in HTML5 does not yet exist. Editing/Adding Effects/Manipulating. 57% Online gaming . 11% Other .

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Something is Going on Down there in the LMS Market

eLearning 24-7

Samsung Galaxy S is expected to be the first real challenger to the iPad, it runs on Android OS, offers Flash 10.1 Again, the iPad runs with HTML5, not Flash nor Java. True, the other tablets and Samsung offer Flash 10.1 and Java, but they offer HTML5 too. Same issue occurred with Opera – used Flash and Java.

article thumbnail

Top 10 LMS/LCMS Trends and Forecasts

eLearning 24-7

Another small trend is providing advanced admin capabilities in the form of admins who have CSS, Flash,PHP or other languages. Many smaller size vendors identify the SBMs as less than 500 employees, others value it as less than 250 employees. The use of geolocation – available in HTML5. Mobile Learning.

LCMS 77