Remove Flash to HTML5 Conversion Remove Internet Remove Offline Remove Player
article thumbnail

Offline Publishing and Viewing Options with Articulate Storyline®

SweetRush

One of the most popular questions coming from our clients in relation to Storyline-authored content is about offline viewing options. For example, one of our clients is deploying a healthcare-related series of courses in Africa, where at least a portion of the target audience may not have access to a reliable Internet connection.

Offline 75
article thumbnail

Watch Interactive Videos on Your iPad…Offline!

TechSmith Camtasia

app from the App Store, but the benefit is that your interactive videos are playable offline (as opposed to just playing the MP4 video using the iPad’s native player). If you host it online with the Smart Player or put it on Screencast.com, no problems. Select the default MP4 – Flash / HTML5 player option.

iPad 97
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Designing eLearning for iPads – Webinar Recording and Q&A

Upside Learning

By using a mobile device as a learning platform, one can leverage its unique features such as camera, audio/ video player & recorder, computing device, eBook reader, GPS, gaming compatibility etc. But we differentiate primarily because of the OS and Flash compatibility. Can we publish HTML5 from Lectora?

iPad 270
article thumbnail

8 reasons for using HTML5 for authoring eLearning course

Adobe Captivate

Adobe Flash has been a productive tool for authoring these courses. But, it suffered from the drawback that OS platforms of latest handheld devices don’t extend support for Flash. HTML5 has superseded Flash as a viable option for authoring eLearning courses because it is supported by all smartphones and tablets.

article thumbnail

SCORM vs AICC: how do they compare?

Elucidat

It doesn’t work offline. SCORM elearning needs an internet connection. It was designed for Flash. SCORM was originally intended for Flash-based courses, which aren’t a popular option now that support for Flash is fading. HTML5 courses can be created to SCORM standards, but it limits their functionality.

AICC 52
article thumbnail

Time to Migrate eLearning Courses from Flash to HTML5

Hurix Digital

In 2017, Adobe made a formal announcement stating that from 2020 the company would no longer support Flash. These Flash files could be viewed on browsers using a Flash player, and on the PC using some third-party applications. So, what went wrong with Flash?

article thumbnail

E-Learning End Users Have Spoken – time for the industry to listen

eLearning 24-7

Interestingly, a large portion of LMS vendors have not optimized their products for the iPad/ iPad2 and with the exception of two content authoring tools, HTML5 capabilities, specifically the ability to output a course in HTML5 does not yet exist. Look at the numbers of WOW (World of Warcraft) players. It continues to grow.