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7 reasons why the new Articulate Storyline is a Game-Changer for eLearning

mLearning Revolution

Bad support and customer care is something you will not find when you become part of the Articulate community, I guarantee you, so this alone is enough to recommend the new Storyline vs. Adobe Captivate. Storyline approaches making software simulations in a whole new ways as compared to Adobe Captivate.

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HTML5 Interactions: Why business platforms are converting Flash courses

Adobe Captivate

Over the years, eLearning developers have used Flash in developing the courses. The coding process had been complicated until HTML5 made its way onto the scene. Previously, the developers used tools like XML, Java, and Flash to code the courses. This is why the HTML5 based authoring tools are being used to develop these courses.

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Adobe Captivate 6: HTML5 At Last!

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

by Kevin Siegel    You've probably heard by now that Adobe released Adobe Captivate 6 late last week. This week, HTML5. Publishing in Captivate takes your source content and outputs it into a format that can be consumed (viewed) by the learner.   Looking to learn Captivate quickly?

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Adobe Captivate 2019: New Update Removes Flash Output

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Once the update is installed, you can confirm you have the latest build by choosing Help > About Adobe Captivate. Also note that while many Flash options were removed from this build, you can still add non-HTML features such as Rollover Captions. Project > HTML5 Tracker.)

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Flash: an End of an Era – What You Need To Know

Aptara

Flash: an End of an Era – What You Need To Know. In 1996 Macromedia first introduced the Flash Player, developed to play videos, animations, and audio and to support enhanced interactivity in web browsers. Soon Flash became a source of frustration for the world’s largest technology companies such as Apple, Google, and Facebook.

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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. The client informed the developer that he could not open the email attachment since he didn't own Adobe Captivate. Looking to learn Captivate quickly?

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Adobe Captivate: Best Practices for Creating Compliant eLearning

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

Selecting the Enable Accessibility option ( Edit > Preferences > Publishing ) makes certain elements in Adobe Captivate projects accessible or open to accessibility technology. The following Adobe Captivate elements are accessible when Enable Accessibility is selected: Project name (derived from Project Properties).