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Digital reference monitors–speakers for playback. Audacity has its own tutorials, including video. Save to CD, swf, avi, mp3, Quicktime. Learning In Hand has a free booklet with step-by-step directions for getting started with podcasting–good for K-12 or higher ed. Podcast Gear. lets you get rid of your mistakes.
A number of contributors have created videos and blog posts on Learning Interactions, and I’ve listed them in the reference section, should you want to view them yourself. However, as Leive Weymeis notes, within the Captivate environment a “Widget” refers specifically to components compatible with Adobe Flash (.swf) References.
The audio referred to in the question was slide audio, the used Learning interaction was Tabs. As I explained in the mentioned blog post, the term ‘Learning Interactions’ was introduced to distinguish the widgets compatible with HTML5 output from the older ‘widgets’ which were created for SWF output.
Whenever a comparison of eLearning authoring tools is published, Captivate still is considered to be the best tool for creation of software tutorials. It is a purely passive tutorial. You can use an embedded video file or refer to a published MP4 file on YouTube (and probably in next version also possible with Vimeo files).
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