article thumbnail

So…How Do You Build eLearning For iPads?

Upside Learning

HTML5 works best with IE10 and browsers like Maxthon, Chrome, Firefox and Safari. This means you have to build different apps for different phones e.g. the iPhone, Blackberry, Samsung SIII etc. Oh, and not all browsers are ready for HTML5 and if you are still using IE 6, 7, & 8, it’s not good news, I am afraid!

iPad 262
article thumbnail

eLearning: Interesting Weekly Finds #5

Upside Learning

The Glide OS is available as a browser plugin for IE, Chrome, Firefox and Safari. Glide is designed to run on Windows, Mac, Linux, Solaris, Android, BlackBerry, iPhone, Palm Pre, Symbian and Windows Mobile and to automatically translate file formats between platforms based on automated device identification and file transcoding.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Phasing out Flash: all your courses will be mobile ready by 2019

OpenSesame

The Adobe honeymoon period started to end in 2010 when Apple famously refused to allow Flash on iPhones and iPads— in part because it was originally designed for desktop browsing, not mobile, which led to performance problems and battery drain, and also due to its security flaws. What does the end of Flash mean for OpenSesame courses?

Flash 52
article thumbnail

Apple missing the small picture

Clark Quinn

Frankly, I haven’t missed Flash on my iPhone or iPad. I hardly miss it on my browser (I have a Firefox extension that blocks it unless I explicitly open them, and I rarely use it; and I browse a lot )! And I don’t care a fig about the claims about ‘openness’, which in both cases are merely a distraction.

Apple 160
article thumbnail

Phasing out Flash: all your courses will be mobile ready by 2019

OpenSesame

The Adobe honeymoon period started to end in 2010 when Apple famously refused to allow Flash on iPhones and iPads— in part because it was originally designed for desktop browsing, not mobile, which led to performance problems and battery drain, and also due to its security flaws. What does the end of Flash mean for OpenSesame courses?

Flash 40
article thumbnail

My Top Ten Tools for 2009

Learning Visions

Firefox My browser of choice. I'm ready for the iPhone. I can't program to save my life, but I can create a course flow mockup using PowerPoint that gets my ideas across to those who can make it look really good. Not only is Twitter great for the occasional laugh, but also a great source of information and links.

Evernote 124
article thumbnail

8 reasons for using HTML5 for authoring eLearning course

Adobe Captivate

If you develop the course using Flash, the same would not run on devices like iPhone and iPad. Support for HTML5 courses is extended by all browsers including latest versions of Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer by Microsoft, iPhone or Apple devices’ Safari etc. 2) Learning on the go becomes easy.