Remove Format Remove Player Remove Server Remove SWF
article thumbnail

eLearning Development: 4 Tech Considerations When Using Videos

Upside Learning

Don’t double compress videos – use uncompressed or lossless formats when compressing to FLV format. Supported source formats are: asf, avi, dv, mov, mp4, mpg, mpeg, wmv. Before using videos in your Flash project, you would need to encode them in a format compatible with Adobe Flash (FLV or MPEG-4). Choosing source video.

FLV 186
article thumbnail

Developing An eLearning Player?

Upside Learning

An eLearning player is a building block for more conventional [one with back and next for navigation buttons] eLearning courses. What’s an eLearning player? This post is based on our experience with development of Flash based eLearning players over the years. Core logic for navigation features like next, back, menu etc.

Player 202
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

The Demise of the Flash Player – What Do I Do Now?

Adobe Captivate

Specifically, we will stop updating and distributing the Flash Player at the end of 2020 and encourage content creators to migrate any existing Flash content to these new open formats. This announcement has a major impact on any organization which has e-learning courses published to run in Adobe Flash player.

article thumbnail

Adobe Captivate 6: HTML5 At Last!

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Publishing in Captivate takes your source content and outputs it into a format that can be consumed (viewed) by the learner. Your learners will not need Captivate installed on their computer to use a SWF, but they will need a modern web browser and the free Adobe Flash Player (www.adobe.com). Of course, SWFs have a problem.

article thumbnail

Move from Flash to HTML5 – and Still Keep Your Super Powers!

Illumen Group

Take inventory of your courses, especially those requiring a Flash Player to view. If you’re not sure, look at the course files on your server. If any of the files have the extension.flv or.swf, it relies on the Flash player. Course format (.swf,htm). FLA file format) (yes or no). Course name (and LMS number).

article thumbnail

10 PPT to SCORM Converters

Ed App

With isEazy , you can create PPT to SCORM courses by exporting PowerPoint slides into isEazy as images where multiple formats are available. With this program, users can generate either 1 solid small web format file (SWF) or a series of SWF files. PPT to SCORM Converter #2 – isEazy. Price: US $199.

PPT 40
article thumbnail

TCC09: Podcasting with Section 508

Experiencing eLearning

Format: solo/co-host, length, posting. Save in different formats. Save to CD, swf, avi, mp3, Quicktime. Your server. Most people at their university use media players, not iPods. Good to have two people–more interesting than listening to just one person at a time. Topic: Something you care about. Garageband.

Podcasts 170