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Flash is Dead: Long Live HTML5 for eLearning

LearnUpon

Adobe Flash technology has helped support the delivery of online multimedia content for nearly two decades. Three popular eLearning formats are also largely dependent on Flash technology for their delivery medium: SCORM, Tin Can (xAPI), and video. The troubled history of Flash. So why the fall?

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Online multimedia content in e-learning: Flash vs. HTML5

Matrix

A lot of technological advances support this pull method, with most LMSs permitting the embed of multimedia content files in the online courses. The last few years had witnessed a strong debate over the two technologies that make possible the embedding of multimedia content files in a web page: Flash and HTML5.

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Articulate Rise – Got questions? We got answers!

B Online Learning

Rise courses use the latest web technologies. Chrome gives the best authoring experience on both PCs and Macs, but you can also use Firefox and Edge. Do Rise courses use Flash? Rise courses do not use flash. They are created solely in HTML5. Please refer to our Articulate 360 product page for further information.

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Rich content being viewed on mobile devices

Aptara

If viewers watch nearly four out of every 10 video files on a handheld device, they may end up downright surprised if and when a company uses technology that breaks on a mobile platform. It may pay to remember that Flash is essentially a dead format where mobile devices are concerned. Major players switch sides.

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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 only with HTML5, not Flash 10.1. True, the other tablets and Samsung offer Flash 10.1, but they offer HTML5 too. We know that if the browser supports Flash 10.1,

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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.

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LMS Vendors: U Can Survive – Innovate, Invigorate and Invent

eLearning 24-7

So, if you include Facebook like in your LMS, wouldn’t it be logical to assume that people would follow the same approach and mechanism, that they use in the actual real Facebook product? HTML5 will be available on every one of those tablets, plus they will offer Flash (notable exception the iPad). What about Twitter?

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