Excellent. I would like to add that the future is already here. The research shows that the Android OS is the most used OS today. And any developer that wants to be competitive need to start learning responsive design. The old days when you need to turn on your desktop PC to do so something has long gone.
I also think the authoring tools will improve to make responsive easier to develop. Right now it takes longer but I think we will see an easier path to mobile design.
Hola, Gracias por tu enseñanza, me ha costado un poco por que no hablo ingles, y es primera vez que trabajo con captivate. pero el que quiere puede. mil gracias por tu aporte.
You're welcome, and thanks for watching. If you haven't already, please subscribe to my channel. goo.gl/iuA6Lm Click the bell icon to receive notifications when I post a new video.
Thank you so much for this. I couldn't view the session live, so I really appreciate it. I especially like the technique of duplicating a slide in order to accommodate overlapping objects in a fluid box--brilliant idea! The tweaking of the fonts at the end to make them uniform has been a constant scourge for me. One question I have: Will the forthcoming update to Captivate ("Project Charm") significantly change how we accomplish any of the techniques in the processes demonstrated here?
As someone who had done some web design, both old-school table-based, and more modern CSS, I can't see why anyone would think that responsive design is only for a percentage of eLearning. I guess if you create eLearning that will only be accessible on a private LAN (corporate training perhaps), whose computer systems all have the same monitor, then maybe you could build something tailored for a specific display resolution. Yet anything you plan to allow learners to access on any device on the internet would REQUIRE a responsive design to avoid side-scrolling. Scrolling sideways MIGHT be ok in very rare exceptions, like a visual timeline perhaps, but should never be required to read the text of a lesson or webpage.
My understanding is that the new release of Adobe Captivate later this year will introduce new methods for responsive design. I hope that this is the one that people gravitate towards. until now it really hasn't taken off in any meaningful way.
Excellent. I would like to add that the future is already here. The research shows that the Android OS is the most used OS today. And any developer that wants to be competitive need to start learning responsive design. The old days when you need to turn on your desktop PC to do so something has long gone.
I also think the authoring tools will improve to make responsive easier to develop. Right now it takes longer but I think we will see an easier path to mobile design.
I saw your lesson from Italy, I really appreciated your explanation and suggestions, congratulations Paul!
Yeah, it's always more difficult to do it live. Especially when you have music playing overtop of a section and nobody tells you.
Great, very clear and comprehensive. Just 1 question: How do we publish to phones as an app now that phonegap is gone (as I understand)?
That capability is no longer available.
Some very useful insights - thanks
You're welcome and thanks for watching
Excellent workshop. Thank you!
You're welcome and thanks for watching.
Hola, Gracias por tu enseñanza, me ha costado un poco por que no hablo ingles, y es primera vez que trabajo con captivate. pero el que quiere puede. mil gracias por tu aporte.
De nada y gracias por mirar.
excelent training
You're welcome, and thanks for watching. If you haven't already, please subscribe to my channel. goo.gl/iuA6Lm
Click the bell icon to receive notifications when I post a new video.
Thank you so much for this. I couldn't view the session live, so I really appreciate it. I especially like the technique of duplicating a slide in order to accommodate overlapping objects in a fluid box--brilliant idea! The tweaking of the fonts at the end to make them uniform has been a constant scourge for me. One question I have: Will the forthcoming update to Captivate ("Project Charm") significantly change how we accomplish any of the techniques in the processes demonstrated here?
I haven't seen anything to suggest otherwise but we will have to wait and see.
Excellent! Thank you very much!
You’re welcome and thanks for watching
Attending live! Woohoo #adobeelearningworld2021
Hi Marie, I hope the glitches in the live session were not too bad.
@@CaptivateTeacher not at all
As someone who had done some web design, both old-school table-based, and more modern CSS, I can't see why anyone would think that responsive design is only for a percentage of eLearning. I guess if you create eLearning that will only be accessible on a private LAN (corporate training perhaps), whose computer systems all have the same monitor, then maybe you could build something tailored for a specific display resolution. Yet anything you plan to allow learners to access on any device on the internet would REQUIRE a responsive design to avoid side-scrolling. Scrolling sideways MIGHT be ok in very rare exceptions, like a visual timeline perhaps, but should never be required to read the text of a lesson or webpage.
My understanding is that the new release of Adobe Captivate later this year will introduce new methods for responsive design. I hope that this is the one that people gravitate towards. until now it really hasn't taken off in any meaningful way.
Awesome.
Thanks!