Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Mobile Learning Samples for mLearning Developers

Rapid Intake launched mLearning Studio yesterday and has published new mobile learning samples.

mLearning Studio can publish to both Flash and HTML5 so that you can create content for desktop and mobile at the same time. Each sample below indicates whether or not it is published as a 'Flash and Mobile' or 'Mobile Only' course.

NOTE: To see the mobile only courses, you need to connect via a mobile browser. You'll probably get unexpected results if you access them with a desktop browser.

NOTE: These should be compatible with all iOS devices, Android 2.2 and higher phones and tablets, and Blackberry touchscreen devices (version 6 and higher). Please either email 'mlearning at rapidintake.com' if you run into any problems, or feel free to add a comment to the blog.



mLearning Studio Samples 

Medical Sample: Fighting Cancer With Vaccines

Navigate to this URL from your computer or mobile device. (Flash and Mobile Course)






mLearning Studio Samples

Industrial Sample: Installing a Power Transfer Switch

Navigate to this URL from your mobile device. (Mobile Only)






mLearning Studio Samples 

Healthcare Sample: First Aid Fundamentals

Navigate to this URL from your computer or mobile device. (Flash and Mobile Course)




mLearning Studio Samples

General Sample: 10 Steps to Good Customer Service

Navigate to this URL from your computer or mobile device. (Flash and Mobile Course)








mLearning Studio Samples

General Sample: Dangers of Distracted Driving

Navigate to this URL from your mobile device. (Mobile Only)

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

These are pretty bad examples of mobile content. With a mobile device, you shouldn't have paragraphs of information. Less is more with mobile.

Garin Hess said...

@Anonymous I have to respectfully disagree with your assumption that we shouldn't have paragraphs of information on a mobile device. In my opinion and experience, mobile device users are more than willing to consume large amounts of text, assuming the text and format of the application is designed for the mobile device. Think of the news sites with long articles and the big uptake in ebook reading. In both cases mobile users are happily willing to consume huge amounts of text. It all depends on design. For more on this, take a look at this article: http://shoutout.rapidintake.com/2011/08/mlearning-best-practices-how-much.html