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Adobe Captivate: Internalize or Externalize?

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

The common way to publish a completed Captivate eLearning video is as a SWF (small web file). When the publish process is complete, you will end up with three files: an HTML file (which is what your learner will need to open the lesson in a web browser), a JavaScript file (called standard.js) and the SWF containing your lesson

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Adobe Captivate 6: HTML5 At Last!

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Currently the most common way to publish a Captivate project is as a Flash SWF, an excellent solution because SWF files can be used by the vast majority of the world's personal computers, browsers and operating systems. As an alternative to publishing a SWF, you can publish as HTML5.

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"Adobe Captivate 9: The Essentials Workbook" Now Shipping

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

    By following step-by-step instructions, you will learn how to create a soft-skills lesson from scratch. .    This book is a self-paced training manual that teaches the core Adobe Captivate skills needed to create interactive eLearning and mLearning content.    Order here.

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Adobe Captivate 6: Delivering Standalone eLearning Lessons

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

by Kevin Siegel    I recently received an email from a new Captivate developer who had delivered an eLearning lesson to a client via email attachment. When publishing a Captivate project file, the format you select will depend upon on how the learner will access the lesson.

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Adobe Captivate: Preloaders

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

by Kevin Siegel        I received an email last week from a Captivate developer who was concerned with how long it was taking for a published lesson to begin playing for his learners. He also verified that his web server wasn't the issue. If you set the Preloader % lower, the lesson will play sooner.

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Got SCORM?

ICS Learning

We generally design our SCOs (which we also refer to as lessons) to be able to be completed by a learner in less than 15 minutes. Server dependencies such as Coldfusion, Perl, ASP or server-based databases are problematic as a particular LMS might be running on a server that does not have those services available.

SCORM 100