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Web 2.0 Applications in Learning

Tony Karrer

I'm writing this post for both attendees of the session to have some notes and for people who were not at the session to hopefully get value from the discussion that happened there. The suggestion by one audience member about requiring blogging (or similar forms) of sharing prior to a formal learning event was great.

Wiki 105
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Day 4. Getting to grips with SCORM API

LearnUpon

Subscribe to our blog to get the latest on SCORM delivered to your inbox. But given the scrutiny both technologies are under, and their love/hate relationship with firewalls , JavaScript APIs represent a sensible approach. They also have a definition that states whether or not the attribute is read only or read/write.

SCORM 40
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Day 4. How SCORM tracks course content

LearnUpon

Subscribe to our blog to get the latest on SCORM delivered to your inbox. But given the scrutiny both technologies are under, and their love/hate relationship with firewalls , JavaScript APIs represent a sensible approach. They also have a definition that states whether or not the attribute is read only or read/write.

SCORM 40
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Managed WordPress Hosting, Open Source Software Innovation and Community with Robert Jacobi From Cloudways

LifterLMS

From about 2000 to 2010, people were rolling up their own servers. Aspects like automatic firewalls, bot protection, all those features start being expected. Every WordPress freelancer, product creator, just regular user creating content, websites, and blogs and whatever, they have to get hosting. Died years ago.

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2010: mLearning Year in Review

mLearning Trends

As predicted, the methods and tools needed for mobile content authoring and delivery also matured a generation or two over the “season” and a few new use cases for mobile learning appeared too. Our experience in 2010 found ALL of our new customers and partners went “hosted” instead of installing enterprise (“behind the firewall”).

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Notes from DevLearn and the Adobe Learning Summit

Steve Howard

As a blog post it’s probably pretty crap – too long, too much scrolling, but as a record of the event, and a method for me to retain my learning, it is just dandy, thank you. Hopefully you, my brave reader, can get similar value from my scribblings, but I make no apology for the size or the content of this blog post.