article thumbnail

What happened in 2023 and what’s next for eLearning standards

Rustici Software

We were shocked to see how many people joined Chris Tompkins and Brian Miller on “Our IEEE LTSC voting members recap 2023 and what’s next for the standards” webinar last week. The Rustici Software team regularly contributes to the evolution of the standards through involvement with the IEEE, ADL and 1EdTech eLearning standards groups.

article thumbnail

What vendors can do to prepare for xAPI 2.0

Experience API

Meaning, the IEEE board deemed that the standard was peer reviewed, leveraged existing good practices, and will continue to make sure it is “maintained” for the foreseeable future. also marks the first time an open-source specification has become a standard. Most vendors treat SHOULD*s as requirements already.

xapi 52
article thumbnail

xAPI, LRS – The Interview

eLearning 24-7

” That said, Rustici Software released the “Project Tin Can” work to open source. They continue to contribute much to the specification effort (open source code libraries in many languages. was so entrenched that no vendor really wanted to touch SCORM at all. SCORM Version 1.2 By 2008-2009, SCORM Version 1.2

xapi 40