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Smokescreen – The Future Of Flash Player?

Upside Learning

Smokescreen project is an effort to bring Flash player to the iPhone/iPad without installing the Flash plug-in. For now this project is targeted at advertisers to enable them to run Flash ads on the iPhone/iPad. Here is a video demonstration of a Flash ad running on an iPad using Smokescreen –.

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How will Flash’s demise affect your SCORM courses?

LearnUpon

Support for Adobe Flash Player ends in 2020. And as Flash has been integral to eLearning for over 20 years, it’s retirement will have a significant effect. Currently, you can export SCORM packages to Flash, HTML, or both. Flash is the most popular output type, so it’s likely that your courses are SWF Flash-based.

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How to Publish SCORM Content in Adobe Captivate

LearnUpon

Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome or Safari) we will always use the SWF/HTML5 output. Output Format: Here you can choose to publish your SCORM as Flash (SWF), or HTML5, or both. If you publish to Flash (SWF), your learners can view the course on their desktop computers.

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How to Publish SCORM Content in Adobe Captivate

LearnUpon

Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome or Safari) we will always use the SWF/HTML5 output. Output Format: Here you can choose to publish your SCORM as Flash (SWF), or HTML5, or both. If you publish to Flash (SWF), your learners can view the course on their desktop computers.

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Offline Publishing and Viewing Options with Articulate Storyline®

SweetRush

Default player. Player customizations, such as background color, color schemes, or alternative fonts will be reverted to default. Flash and JavaScript®. You may also need to allow access to the local files for the embedded resources to work properly.

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Learning Content in Crisis? The How and Why of Moving from Flash to HTML5

gomo learning

Jobs named Flash as the number-one reason Macs crash, and contemporary accounts highlighted its poor security record. Flash was slow to support H.264 The legacy, software-based standard that Flash Player used drained battery significantly faster. On mobile, Flash hasn’t received official support for nearly a decade.