Add Slides to Your Adobe Captivate Video Demo
In this video tutorial, I show you my workflow for adding slides to your Video Demo projects, including titles and additional content slides.
In this video tutorial, I show you my workflow for adding slides to your Video Demo projects, including titles and additional content slides.
Adobe Captivate Hotfix for LMS Reporting issues in Chrome 80
Adobe has prepared a hotfix for the Google Chrome 80 issue.
Some time ago, some users identified that there might be an issue with your Adobe Captivate eLearning courses in the latest version of Google Chrome (version 80). When learners close an eLearning course by closing the browser window, or simply opening another webpage, the commands that would send final scores to the LMS would be lost.
This article explains the issue in greater detail: https://helpx.adobe.com/captivate/kb/unable-report-completion-status-lms.html
The good news is that Adobe has developed a hotfix for Adobe Captivate. You can download the hotfix from here: https://helpx.adobe.com/captivate/kb/hotfix-lms-reporting-issue-chrome-80.html
Convert Your PNG to SVG Images
Sometimes even the best PNG images don't look so great in your Adobe Captivate eLearning projects. Here's a procedure for converting your high-quality PNG files to SVG images.
Sometimes even the best PNG images don't look so great in your Adobe Captivate eLearning projects. Here's a procedure for converting your high-quality PNG files to SVG images. The advantage of SVGs is that they are relatively small in file size but they are also vector graphics. What that means is that SVGs look great at any size and they are completely compatible with Adobe Captivate.
Shuffle Answers with All of the Above in Adobe Captivate
In this video tutorial, I show you my solution for a multiple-choice question that not only uses an All of the Above Answer but shuffles the other answers as well.
In this video tutorial, I show you my solution for a multiple-choice question that not only uses an All of the Above Answer but shuffles the other answers as well.
Photography For Your Shoe String Budget eLearning
One of the biggest challenges in developing e-Learning is to create visually appealing work with little or no money. There are millions of sources online that you can draw from for your visual images. However, the legal use of these images is something you need to consider before you publish it to your audience. Using a photographer's work without their permission and without paying the appropriate license fee is copyright infringement.
One of the biggest challenges in developing e-Learning is to create visually appealing work with little or no money. There are millions of sources online that you can draw from for your visual images. However, the legal use of these images is something you need to consider before you publish it to your audience. Using a photographer's work without their permission and without paying the appropriate license fee is copyright infringement.
Some of my colleagues have tried to claim that using a photo from the Internet in an e-learning course can fall under fair use laws. Claiming fair use is only sometimes valid. If you were teaching your audience about a company, you can use their company logo and call it fair use. You could not use a photograph of their CEO taken by a photojournalist, nor could you use a funny comic strip about that company without paying the appropriate license fees to the original creators of those materials. There are balance tests that a court would use to determine if fair use applies to each case. However, you don't want it to get that far.
Here are some great resources for multimedia that may be helpful for those with little or no budget to spend:
Pikwizard is an excellent free stock photo site with over 100,000 high-quality images. One thing that makes Pikwizard unique in the category of free image websites is the number of high-quality photos of people. Often you can only find pictures of people on the pay-per-use or subscription stock photo sites. Be aware that each image has it's own license restrictions, and you must follow those restrictions. For example, you could not use an image marked for editorial use in your eLearning. One feature handy for eLearning developers with little or no budget is that Pikward gives you the ability to edit the photos right inside your browser with their Designwizard software.
Wikimedia is a collection of multimedia that, for the most part, is open and free to use without an individual permission. The particular creators retain the ownership of all these resources. Check for the licensing terms for each item to ensure that your planned use is acceptable.
MorgueFile is a site dedicated to free photography. In most cases, you can reuse their material within your work. However, you cannot use it on its own. You may be able to modify much of the work, so cropping out parts of the photo that you do not need can be considered acceptable.
Turbophoto maintains a small repository of free stock images that you can download and reuse. The selection isn't vast. However, you can add this as a source in case you are designing material that happens to fit one of the ten or so topics they cover.
4FreePhotos is an excellent site that is maintained by photographers who love taking pictures and getting them out there. The website seems to be funded by lots of ads, but I don't mind this as the photos are all free.
Stock.XCHNG is another excellent resource with a vast number of photos. They do require an account set up with a login and password, and you will need to read their license agreement for the images you download as there are some restrictions.
Of course, last but not least, almost everyone owns a digital camera. If everyone in your training department took a dozen or so pictures each week to contribute to a team multimedia database, you would find that you would have a massive stockpile of free to use images or videos in reasonably short order. Take pictures of your companies building, your competition, the products that you sell, and more. Since you own the images, you will never have to pay royalties or license fees to anyone or worry about infringing on anyone's intellectual property.
Replace Audio Narration in your Adobe Captivate Video Demo
In this video tutorial, I show you how you can replace or re-record the audio narration in your Adobe Captivate Video Demo projects.
In this video tutorial, I show you how you can replace or re-record the audio narration in your Adobe Captivate Video Demo projects.
Publishing for Your LMS - Monday, February 3, 10:00 EST | 15:00 UTC
In this Livestream, I will review all the options that you should be using and the ones you should avoid when publishing your Adobe Captivate eLearning course.
In this Livestream, I will review all the options that you should be using and the ones you should avoid when publishing your Adobe Captivate eLearning course.
Using Adobe Captivate Shared Actions
In this Adobe Captivate video tutorial, I show you a way you can use Shared Actions to save yourself some time writing Advanced Actions by reusing the Shared Action for different objects and multistate objects.
In this Adobe Captivate video tutorial, I show you a way you can use Shared Actions to save yourself some time writing Advanced Actions by reusing the Shared Action for different objects and multistate objects.
Fake Text Popups in Adobe Captivate Fluid Box Design
In this video tutorial, I show you how I would manage a simulated text popup in my fluid box responsive design eLearning project in Adobe Captivate.
In this video tutorial, I show you how I would manage a simulated text popup in my fluid box responsive design eLearning project in Adobe Captivate.
Can You Still Upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10?
In this video tutorial, I test that theory out and see if I can upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 and complete product activation.
Microsoft has now officially ended support for Windows 7. Continuing to run Windows 7 on your computer means that you are vulnerable to security risks, viruses and you will no longer receive updates for your operating system. Microsoft wants Windows 7 users to either purchase a full license of Windows 10 or purchase a new computer with Windows 10 already installed on it. According to rumours, the activation server is still running that would allow Windows 7 users to upgrade to Windows 10 for free for one year after the launch of Windows 10. In this video tutorial, I test that theory out and see if I can upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 and complete product activation. Disclaimer: I'm going through this process for purely educational and entertainment purposes only. The main laptop that I use day to day runs an entirely legitimate copy of Windows 10 that came with my PC. If you decide to follow these steps in the video on your own Windows 7 PC, you do so at your own risk.
Download the Windows 10 Installation Media Tool:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10
Windows 7 Support Announcement:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-ca/help/4057281/windows-7-support-ended-on-january-14-2020