Book Image

Mastering Adobe Captivate 6

By : Damien Bruyndonckx
Book Image

Mastering Adobe Captivate 6

By: Damien Bruyndonckx

Overview of this book

Adobe Captivate is the industry-leading solution for authoring E-learning content. With adobe Captivate one can capture the on-screen action, enhance e-Learning projects, insert SCORM and AICC-compliant quizzes and then, publish your work in various formats for easy deployment on virtually any desktop and mobile device. Mastering Adobe Captivate 6 is a comprehensive guide to creating SCORM-compliant demonstrations, simulations and quizzes with Adobe Captivate. The sample projects demonstrate each and every feature of Adobe Captivate giving you the expertise you need to create and deploy your own professionalquality e-learning courses. Mastering Adobe Captivate 6 will guide you through the creation of three e-learning projects including a demonstration, a simulation and a SCORM-compliant quiz. The first part of the book will drive you through the main three steps of the Captivate production process. In the first step, we will use the powerful capture engine of Captivate to generate the needed slides and screenshots. In the second step, we will enhance our slides and screenshots using the objects provided by Captivate. These objects include animations, interactions, videos and more. In the third step, we will make our project available to the outside world by publishing it in various formats including Adobe Flash PDF, video, and even HTML 5. The second part of the book will focus on the advanced tools of Captivate. These tools include the questions slides that make up a quiz, SCORM and AICC compliance, localization of your e-Learning content and widgets among others. In the last chapter, you we will unleash the true power of Captivate by using the variables and the advanced actions to create a unique e-Learning experience.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Mastering Adobe Captivate 6
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Chapter 1. Getting Started with Captivate

Since its introduction in 2004, Captivate has always been the industry-leading solution for authoring eLearning content. At the beginning, it was a very simple screen-capture utility named FlashCam. In 2002, a company named eHelp acquired FlashCam and turned it into an eLearning authoring tool named Robodemo. In 2004, another company called Macromedia acquired eHelp and changed the name of the product one last time. Macromedia Captivate was born. A few months later, Adobe acquired Macromedia and, consequently, Macromedia Captivate became Adobe Captivate.

As the years passed, Adobe released Captivate 2, Captivate 3 and Captivate 4, adding tools, objects, and features along the way. One of the most significant events in the Captivate history took place in July 2010, when Adobe released Captivate 5. For the release of Captivate 5, Adobe engineers have rewritten the code of the entire application from the ground up. As a result, Captivate 5 was the first version to be available on both Mac OS and Windows. Captivate 5 was also equipped with a brand new user interface, similar to the interface of other Adobe Applications, not to mention an impressive array of new and enhanced tools.

As of today, the latest version of Captivate is version 6. Captivate 6 comes with a new improved quiz engine that supports partial scoring and pretests, HTML5 publishing, advanced interactions, new Smart Shapes, a new video capture mode, and tons of other (not so) small enhancements. With all this power sitting one click away, it is easy to overcharge our projects with lots of complicated sound and visual effects, lots of sophisticated interactions that can ultimately drive the user away from the primary objective of every Captivate Project: teaching.

While working with Captivate, one should never forget that Captivate is an eLearning tool. At the most basic level, it simply means that you, the developer of the Project, and your audience are united by a very special kind of relationship: a student to teacher relationship. Therefore, from now on, and for the rest of the book, you, the reader of these pages, will not be called "the developer" or "the programmer", but the teacher, and the ones who will view your finished applications will not be the "users" or "the visitors", but will be called the learners or the students. You will see that it changes everything.

In this chapter, we will:

  • Discuss the different editions of Captivate

  • Discuss the general steps of the Captivate production process

  • Tour the Captivate interface

  • Work with panels and workspaces

  • View the finished sample applications