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Beginning of Long Slow Death of Flash

Tony Karrer

Earlier this year I questioned why there was Still No Flash on the iPhone and iPad. It’s become quite clear that Apple (Steve Jobs) is going to block putting Flash on these platforms. Today the big news is Scribd Switches to HTML5; Adobe To Make Tools for HTML5. It’s the beginning of the long slow death of Flash.

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Top Learning, Technology & Media Links: Weekly Digest – 3

Upside Learning

In continuation to our weekly roundup of the best links shared on Twitter and Facebook, here is a collection of our top 15 links from the last week, each accompanied by a quick brief. Taking Cues From Industry: Using Casual Games For Learning At DAU. Get Serious About Social Learning By Focusing On What Matters.

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JavaScript Tricks for Articulate Storyline 3/360

eLearning Brothers

The biggest drawback to most of them was that they wouldn’t work with the Flash version of the course. But now, one of the cool things about Articulate Storyline 3 and 360 is the option to publish only for HTML5. We can use custom JavaScript to affect elements in the player and on the slides. area-secondary’. area-secondary’.

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What is Closed Captioning? Everything You Need to Know About it

Hurix Digital

From how we entertain ourselves to how we learn, digital content is at the core of it all. Compatible with many online platforms such as Facebook, YouTube, and Windows Media Player. WebVTT A newer format is designed for web-based videos, HTML5 video players, and streaming services.

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A ‘Responsive’ Articulate Storyline Solution

eLearning Brothers

You know that Articulate Storyline 3/360 is not responsive (the player is responsive, but course content remains fixed). Is Flash installed? These options depend on which boxes you checked when you published the course: Is there a Flash version? Is there an HTML5 version? Watch the video below to learn more.

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A Decade in eLearning – Then, Now and Next

Rob Hubbard

Learning has gone mobile. Flash is dead. Back when we could author in Adobe Flash it was possible to create all kinds of cool interactive content. As long as the user had the Flash player, the content would work. Now HTML5 is the preferred form, however, it’s a step backwards in terms of what we can easily create.

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Screencast.com - New Features available!

TechSmith Camtasia

Flash hotspots are now supported by our HTML5 player. This means your Camtasia Studio hotspots will work in non-Flash conditions- for example on an iPad. Screencast.com now also supports WebM video and we now have feature parity among our Flash, Silverlight, and HTML5 viewing environments.