Forum Discussion

MindaCarl's avatar
MindaCarl
Community Member
3 months ago

Publishing Rise360 in HTML5

Hi all, 

I've spent over an hour reading through a lot of threads on the topic of publishing Rise360 into HTML5 and I've found different information so I thought I'd bundle everything into one message to clarify things. 

  • Some messages seem to suggest that any publishing of Rise360 ends up as HTML5.
  • Some messages say that the Web version is HTML5. 
  • A couple of messages seem to suggest that the reason we couldn't see that downloaded SCORMs were in HTML5 was that, since Flash has disappeared, there's no need to make the distinction. 
  • One response about this issue was to duplicate the downloaded files and rename them, e.g. ""story.html" to "story_html5.html"" but this seems specific to Storyline so not sure it's relevant to Rise. 

Question 1: Is everything published in HTML5 and we just can't see it in the file extension name cos of the info above?

Question 2: Is the duplicating & renaming hack mentioned a real solution for an LMS that seems to require HTML5? 

Thanks very much for clarifying :)

Minda

  • MindaCarl's avatar
    MindaCarl
    Community Member

    Hi Luciana, 

    Thanks for your tip! I'll recommend that to the team. Meanwhile, it seems they've found a solution. I'm hoping to hear more about how they went about it soon. And I'm still waiting to find out about the name of our LMS, but it's apparently quite outdated and no one seems to know. 

    • EricSantos's avatar
      EricSantos
      Staff

      Thank you, Minda. Please let us know if you need additional support with this. We're happy to help!

      • MindaCarl's avatar
        MindaCarl
        Community Member

        Hi Eric, 

        We've now had a conversation with the team to figure out what happened. There seem to be 2 issues:

        • Apparently, our LMS (PeopleSoft Entreprise Learning Management) doesn't accept the files if they don't explicitly have the HTML5 name in them. So the team has to rename the main HTML files to include the 5 in them. Does that seem normal to you?
        • Because of internal network security measures, they actually have to insert a couple of lines of code at the start of all the main HTML files. This is obviously a private issue, but thought I'd share so you're aware of this use case.

         

        Best, 

        Minda

  • MindaCarl's avatar
    MindaCarl
    Community Member

    Thanks for the quick feedback Karl! For some reason, however, it seems my team is still having trouble integrating the SCORM onto our (ancient and very simple) LMS... If anyone has any thoughts on why, it would be very much appreciated!

    • LucianaPiazza's avatar
      LucianaPiazza
      Staff

      Hi MindaCarl

      Thanks for reaching out! 

      When publishing to an LMS, you have the options of AICC, SCORM 1.2, SCORM 2004, xAPI, and cmi5. We typically recommend that folks test their course in SCORM Cloud to see that their file is working as expected. 

      Could you please share the name of your LMS? I'm sure it would be helpful if other folks are currently using this and can share pointers. 

      Looking forward to hearing from you!