article thumbnail

Off-The-Shelf Vs. Custom Flash-To-HTML5 Conversion

eLearning Industry

Many off-the-shelf tools claim to convert Flash® courses to HTML5, but are they truly mobile responsive? Opting for custom HTML5 conversion through an experienced vendor ensures your learners get the most out of your content—in a format they can actually use. This post was first published on eLearning Industry.

article thumbnail

Things to Consider Before Investing in eLearning Development Tools

Hurix Digital

However, these savings come at an initial cost – the cost of investing in an eLearning development tool , which is used to develop and implement these online courses; and train staff in course creation and administration. These eLearning development tools make course creation and implementation efficient and user-friendly.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

How to Reduce Flash-to-HTML5 Conversion Costs

42 Design Square

How much do you have to spend to convert your flash-based courses converted to HTML5? The answer depends on your existing courseware and what you expect your HTML5 courseware to do. Check if you can reuse your graphic assets and collate your original art files in Illustrator, Photoshop, Adobe Flash, and Corel Draw files.

article thumbnail

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“Legacy eLearning” refers to any training that was developed using software that is outdated, unsupported, or incompatible with current learning systems.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.

article thumbnail

Apple Vs Adobe: Impact On Mobile Learning Development

Upside Learning

Apple has revised the Developer Program License Agreement to ban the use of cross compiler tools like Unity3d, Appcelerator’s Titanium, Adobe’s Flash CS5 etc. for developing iPhone and iPad applications. As per the new agreement developers can use only C, C++, Objective-C, and JavaScript to develop iPad/iPhone apps.

Apple 205
article thumbnail

eLearning Thought Leaders: Mark Lassoff

eLearning Weekly

Mark is an anomoly in the world of elearning these days, because he knows how to code. I’m not just talking about the two big programming languages, HTML and Flash. Mark works with and trains javascript, PERL, XML, CSS, PHP/MySQL, and the new and somewhat talked about HTML5. How does that help? ML: I think critically.

article thumbnail

Course Authoring Tools for eLearning Developers and the masses

eLearning 24-7

elearning maker - another product form e-doceo; screenwriting, storyboards, media inserts, selection and moving of elements plus more; a beginner could use some of the features, but a developer has some additional capabilities and flexibilities. documentary maker and iPhone/iPad/iPod touch developer kit. Output to HTML5.