Remove Player Remove Server Remove SWF Remove Web
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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
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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. According to Adobe, the Flash Player is installed on the vast majority of the word's computers.

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TCC09: Podcasting with Section 508

Experiencing eLearning

Method of delivery will be a hybrid podcast via the web with interaction either via email or a forum. Save to CD, swf, avi, mp3, Quicktime. Your server. Most people at their university use media players, not iPods. Posted in Accessibility, Higher Ed, Read/Write Web. Market research on US podcast audience.

Podcasts 170
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10 PPT to SCORM Converters

Ed App

With this program, users can generate either 1 solid small web format file (SWF) or a series of SWF files. Many output options are offered by the software such as e-mail, CD, server upload, web, SCORM, and more. They offer a customizable course player that is capable of playing audio and video.

PPT 40
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Connection Error in Slide Video

Adobe Captivate

I got a chance to closely analyze many of these specific issues and in all the cases it turned out to be server configuration problems. All you need to do is publish the project and upload the entire publish folder to the server – Some cases just a web server (IIS, Apache etc) and other cases to an LMS.

Slides 70
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Move from Flash to HTML5 – and Still Keep Your Super Powers!

Illumen Group

Popular web browsers have already discussed their plans to no longer support the Flash plugin. 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.

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Adobe Captivate 6: Delivering Standalone eLearning Lessons

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

If the learner is going to access the lesson over the internet (either from a web server or an LMS), publishing SWF and/or HTML5 is the way to go. If you decide to publish a SWF, the learner will use a web browser to access the lesson. If you publish HTML5, a web browser is still required for the learner.