Company policy: no flash player allowed - help? Nov 16, 2011 By David Janus If company policy is that the Adobe flash player is not allowed on desktops, will presentations published for .exe still work?
Steve Flowers Hero over 11 years ago11/16/11 at 4:17 am (UTC) Nope. The .exe is a wrapper that rewires any potential Flash security barriers for local run. This frame still runs standard HTML / Flash content.
Phil Mayor Hero over 11 years ago11/16/11 at 4:20 am (UTC) you could use the elearning enhanced html player for studio
David Janus Author over 11 years ago11/16/11 at 4:21 am (UTC) Crap. OK thanks for the quick answer. You wouldn't happen to know if the same problem would exist with Lectora content?
David Janus Author over 11 years ago11/16/11 at 4:23 am (UTC) Phil Mayor said: you could use the elearning enhanced html player for studio Hi Phil - can you elaborate? Where would I get this, how does it work etc?
Steve Flowers Hero over 11 years ago11/16/11 at 4:33 am (UTC) Lectora stuff published to EXE is self-packaged to a single file. I'm not certain if this includes the Flash player for standalone run on a machine without the player. I would venture to guess that it does not, but i could be wrong.
5 Replies
Nope. The .exe is a wrapper that rewires any potential Flash security barriers for local run. This frame still runs standard HTML / Flash content.
you could use the elearning enhanced html player for studio
Crap. OK thanks for the quick answer.
You wouldn't happen to know if the same problem would exist with Lectora content?
Hi Phil - can you elaborate? Where would I get this, how does it work etc?
Lectora stuff published to EXE is self-packaged to a single file. I'm not certain if this includes the Flash player for standalone run on a machine without the player. I would venture to guess that it does not, but i could be wrong.
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