Yes, you should be able to open the course in the latest update of Chrome if you published for Flash/HTML5 and Flash has been disabled.
If you're publishing to the web, you'll want to point folks to the story.html file in your output, as that will look at the browser they're using and what's supported to determine playback (Flash vs. HTML5) and serve up the right content.
What about if you're using an LMS? I have created a SCORM package and it has both Flash and HTML5 files in it. Is there a way to make it select the HTML5 file?
You can force HTML5 first in your publish settings. Click on "Formats" when publishing to see the options. You'll see in my example I set it to always play HTML5 - it will fall back on Flash if the user has a browser from, like, 2005. You can even choose to not publish a Flash format at all. Hope this helps!
3 Replies
Hi Sofia,
Yes, you should be able to open the course in the latest update of Chrome if you published for Flash/HTML5 and Flash has been disabled.
If you're publishing to the web, you'll want to point folks to the story.html file in your output, as that will look at the browser they're using and what's supported to determine playback (Flash vs. HTML5) and serve up the right content.
Let us know if you have any other questions!
What about if you're using an LMS? I have created a SCORM package and it has both Flash and HTML5 files in it. Is there a way to make it select the HTML5 file?
Thanks,
Mark
You can force HTML5 first in your publish settings. Click on "Formats" when publishing to see the options. You'll see in my example I set it to always play HTML5 - it will fall back on Flash if the user has a browser from, like, 2005. You can even choose to not publish a Flash format at all. Hope this helps!
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