With Adobe Captivate 7 you can create Drag and Drops that work on desktops and on iPads.įinally you are able to capture system audio when you are capturing applications and screens with Adobe Captivate.Īdobe Captivate 7 will make life easier for the people deploying their content to Moodle. Prior to Adobe Captivate 7 (well 6.1 to be 100% accurate) you did not have this functionality in Adobe Captivate but thankfully InfoSemantics created some amazing widgets that allowed you to easily create drag and drop in your Adobe Captivate projects. This has been a feature that has been requested by users for years and years and now it has arrived in Adobe Captivate 7.
Native drag and drop capability in Adobe Captivate. Here are my favorite features in Adobe Captivate 7: Essentially this made it possible for us to test and ensure that our widgets work as they should in Adobe Captivate 7. In Adobe Captivate 7 all the additional features that were made available in Adobe Captivate 6.1 are included.Īnother very positive thing that I’d like to mention is that this time Adobe has been engaged in a very constructive collaboration with us Widget Developers about changes in the Widget API. If you are an Adobe Captivate Subscription user or have ASA coverage you would have gotten some of the new features already in the Captivate 6.1 update. I have been participating in the beta test of the product and there is some great new stuff available to you now. So, as it stands now, I find it very clunky for Learners and would not recommend it.Today, June 3rd 2013, Adobe Captivate 7 is released. These are all the same things I encountered as I tried out the different options listed at the other thread. If they went to get to the top of their notes, they can do so with a mouse wheel, but there's still no scroll bar UNLESS they first use an arrow key, in which case the scroll bar appears.They must click outside to deselect the text. When they click IN the slide they see the notes at the bottom, and the text is selected. When they first get to the slide they see the notes that are at the top. That's great BUT when Learners return to their notes, the scroll box is no longer there. When the text entry box is "filling up" while one is typing, a scroll box appears.They must click outside this area, carefully position the insertion point. Each time they go back to the notes to type in text, previous text is selected.Now Learners can access their notes from any slide. Slide: select the slide created in step 1 Give this tab a name, e.g., Learner notes With the Features tab active in the Player, click the icon for Add under the Player tabs list From the Home tab, click Player (in the Publish group) Make the slide available as a tab on the player Create the slide and insert a text entry box on it, sizing it to take up most of the slide. So, one way to create a lightbox learner notes slide, for anyone who's wondering, would be toġ. But, I'm thinking you may have a workaround (aside from Javascript, I mean, although if you could provide all the code, I'd be game). Michael, I the lightbox idea is nice, but the disadvantages that may it clunky IMHO for the Learner are still there.
In this thread there are some alternatives. I've participated in a past discussion about this. I've been following this discussion because I'd love to have a relatively elegant way for Learners to add and insert notes.