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Is HTML5 Ready for eLearning Development?

Upside Learning

Clearly Apple is backing HTML 5, CSS 3 and JavaScript for developing future web applications. Browsers Lack HTML5 Full Support – While making HTML5 the de-facto standard Apple seems to have forgotten that none of the web browsers for mobile or desktop have full HTML 5 implementations at this time. Is it ready for eLearning Development?

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The Open Screen Project – Will It Succeed?

Upside Learning

The most important one is Adobe removing restrictions on SWF and FLV/F4V specifications. It says – “The iPhone is awesome, but getting the full web experience on your set-top box or TV is something that represents a far bigger opportunity”. Check out this article by O’Reilly , to get an idea of the war for the web that’s on.

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Desire2Learn Mobile FLV - eLearning from Last Week

Tony Karrer

Browse eLearning Content

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Enhancing Interactions with Media Elements

Vikas Joshi on Interactive Learning

Each button or hotspot can lead to a hyperlink, which can be a web URL. Using the Media Toolbox, a course designer can add custom buttons or hotspots to an interaction. Raptivity Media Toolbox. A button can also pop up a video (.flv/.f4v), f4v), an image (.jpg,png,gif) jpg,png,gif) or text.

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Developing An eLearning Player?

Upside Learning

Adobe’s Flash Professional is widely used for eLearning development but some organizations don’t allow running Flash Player or any other 3 rd party plug-ins for that matter in their web browsers. flv [Flash video format] is not supported in some servers by default and it needs to be configured.

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Adobe Captivate: Adding Videos to eLearning

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

by Kevin Siegel      You can add several types of video into a Captivate project, including AVI, MOV, and Flash Video (FLV or F4V). If you have a web server, you can upload the videos to the server in advance and simply copy/paste the URL to the video into the URL field.

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ADOBE CAPTIVATE: Free Matching Images and Videos

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

During the video portion of the class, we import a Flash Video (flv) which students love because without the background color in the video, it's possible to include an animated guide throughout a lesson. I quickly discovered, much to my delight, that Flash Video (flv) is one of the available download formats.