Example of eLearning created for the iPad
Posted in eLearning How To on April 4th, 2010 by Stephen Johnson – Be the first to commentiPad and eLearning
If you are looking to deliver eLearning via the Apple iPad and need help, call Magic at (866) 501-6897 or email magic+mediamanagers.net. Creating custom eLearning for use on the iPad poses unique challenges for the industry. Why? Well, for one, the iPad does not support Adobe Flash, which is the overwhelming industry standard for web-based interactive eLearning development. The vast majority of serious eLearning authoring tools have some form of Flash support or capability, and many eLearning developers create eLearning natively in Flash. According to sources within Adobe, over 70% of games and 75% of web video is deployed upon Flash – including the popular television video site Hulu. So authoring eLearning for the iPad requires eLearning developers to learn some new skills. The example iPad eLearning demo below was output as a QuickTime movie, which works quite well on the iPad.
Example Video of Elearning Designed for the iPad
Click the Play button on the bottom left corner of this demo to start playback.
iPhone OS
The first generation iPad runs the iPhone OS (which probably will need a new name, since the operating system runs on iPod, iPad, and iPhone). You should pick up an iPad for development purposes and get a feel for its interface, capabilities, and limitations. There are many issues with the iPhone OS that make it less than optimal for business users. For one, the content is managed through iTunes, rather than a user-friendly and familiar file folder structure. Additionally, you can only run one application at a time. Meaning, you cannot listen to the iPod while switching between editing a spreadsheet and document.
Additionally, you’ll want to experience the difference between loading content movies (you’ll likely want to experiment with QuickTime as a Flash replacement for now) and loading these on a web server and accessing the training via the Safari browser on the iPad. While loading QuickTime movies on the iPad will make them load and run faster than accessing them over a broadband connection, you may find that it is easier to lay out your course navigation on the web rather than manage this content across a bunch of iPads in the field. Moreover, the largest iPad hard drive size is 64 GB. If your learners download any significant number of HD movies, install photos, or otherwise sycn their iPad to their personal iTunes account, you’ll quickly run out of space. Your QuickTime movies will also be much larger than your typical Flash-based movies, putting even more demand on the hard drives.
HTML5
HTML5 is the proposed new version of the HyperText Markup Language and is designed to allow web developers an HTML-based method for delivering content in ways presently dependent upon Adobe Flash, Microsoft Silverlight, and other multimedia applications. If you wish to deploy applications to the browser that have a look and feel of Flash, but are pure HTML, then HTML5 will be one of the key skills you’ll want in your arsenal.
QuickTime
If you are accustom to developing high-quality audio/visual eLearning in Flash, then you are probably not going to want to trade down to less sophisticated looking content simply because the iPad does not support Flash. A solid option is to output your content movies as QuickTime. This will work for much of the lecture based content, but the interactive “you try it” types of lessons will require some thought. I’ll write more about this in a later article.