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The Learning industry is talking a lot about HTML5 these days. Its compatibility with multiple devices, augmenting mobile learning, has made it the hot favorite of L&D circles. However, HTML5 has cons along with its much talked about pros. As learning experts, we can use even the cons of HTML5 to benefit e-learning.
Organizations have tremendous investment in Flash-based legacy courses. With the phasing out of Flash, the legacy Flash courses need to be converted to HTML5 so that they can support multi-device delivery (that is, the same course can run across devices from desktops/laptops to tablets/smartphones). Adopting sticky learning strategies.
Organizations have tremendous investment in Flash-based legacy courses. With the phasing out of Flash, the legacy Flash courses need to be converted to HTML5 so that they can support multi-device delivery (that is, the same course can run across devices from desktops/laptops to tablets/smartphones). Adopting sticky learning strategies.
This blog talks about reasons online learning is updating the content from Flash to HTML5. There are a host of tools, software, programming languages available to developers to choose from, but when it comes to creating interactive online learning solutions, the choice usually narrows down to two alternatives – Adobe Flash and HTML5.
Mobile content must be accessible for all. As business leaders in every industry strive to produce useful, compelling mobile content for their potential and existing customers, there are many issues that they must grapple with. Mobile users, and more specifically the devices they utilize, come in a wide variety of forms.
However, all that changed with the statement of one person – Steve Jobs, who declared in 2010 that iOS, Apple’s mobile operating system would not support the Flash Player. Apple’s products, the iPhone and the iPad, had (and continue to have) a large share of the mobile device market. HTML5 is the perfect solution to this problem.
The essence of this blog is to spotlight those who are distinguished by their enduring, enterprise-wide dedication to eLearning content development excellence. Their forte lies in crafting engaging and learner-centric solutions, ensuring a competitive advantage for your organization. Flash to HTML5Conversion.
As Nigel Fenwick, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester Research, explained in a Wall Street Journal blog entry, "weaving" digital materials into the fabric of business operations is increasingly critical to success for companies.
Our growing mobile dependency has shifted the corporate learning scene from the traditional, server-driven and browser-based experiences to the Cloud. Mobile-learning , or mLearning , is rising to the occasion. Train to train using the mobile! This is due to the HTML5 influence that boasts greater device compatibility.
Mobile devices are all the rage, and it looks like their popularity is here to stay. Luckily, HTML5 offers a versatile multi-platform alternative. In this article, I’ll share 6 tips to help you convert your eLearning course from Flash to HMTL5 to optimize the mobile learning experience of your audience.
It means there are hundreds or thousands of learners at your company that will no longer receive your compliance, product, sales, safety, business process, or any other mission-critical training your organization has to offer. The fix is simple, just convert your legacy courses to HTML5. Choose A Conversion Strategy.
Nearly everyone is familiar with Adobe Flash, for those who are not, it is a software with which apps, mobile games, desktop applications, and animations are produced. You can view Flash files like mobile and desktop apps by using the Adobe Flash Player or other third-party players. What is HTML5 and why is it used?
From simple PowerPoint to e-learning conversions, to the complex Flash to HTML5conversions, it can handle anything you throw at it. Convert Flash to HTML5. Fast forward to present day; these courses no longer work on mobile devices, since Flash is not supported on these devices. Convert Legacy Courses to HTML 5.
But, with learners branching away from desktop learning and exploring micro-learning on various mobile devices, Flash-based courses are becoming redundant: Flash-based content is not supported by mobile devices or the latest browsers. e.g. is the course not mobile-friendly, but now your learners use iPads for training?
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