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Adobe Captivate Article

 

CaptivatePlayer: Delivering Macromedia Captivate Content on the Web


Jesse Randall Warden

Jesse Randall Warden

www.jessewarden.com

Table of Contents

Created:
16 May 2005
User Level:
Beginner

With Macromedia Captivate, you can create interactive tutorials with recorded narration, built-in testing, with an easy, painless, and quick process. But now that authors can so easily create tutorials, they have time to think about the best way to deliver their content to end users, and to think about what works well with the Macromedia Captivate workflow.

When I started using Macromedia Captivate early last year, I quickly learned that Macromedia Captivate authors did not have a clear deployment path for Macromedia Captivate content they wanted to make available on the web. This problem does not stem from Macromedia Captivate— the tool has a plethora of publishing options. Macromedia Captivate can publish to SWF file format, optionally wrapped in HTML, to Macromedia Breeze, a stand-alone executable with an auto-run option for CD-ROM delivery, e-mail, Microsoft Word, and you can even send your content to a server through FTP functionality from within Macromedia Captivate. While heavily testing Macromedia Captivate for my own use and collaborating with others in the Macromedia Captivate community, I quickly found many Macromedia Captivate authors that are experienced, organized, and extremely talented in delivering documentation, tutorials, and other various e-learning content.

To support effective and easy-to-use delivery of Macromedia Captivate content on the web, I developed a utility, called CaptivatePlayer. In this article, you will learn how to deploy Macromedia Captivate content with CaptivatePlayer.

Requirements

To complete this tutorial you will need to install the following software and files:

Adobe Captivate

Macromedia Flash Player

Tutorials and sample files:

Prerequisite knowledge:

  • You should know how to use Macromedia Captivate at a beginner level.
  • You should be able to edit XML files with a text editor, have a basic understanding of editing HTML, and be able to move files around in folders.
  • If you are looking to deploy your content quickly, go to the "How to Use the Play List XML File" section.
  • If you are a web developer looking to integrate and customize the CaptivatePlayer into your site, go to the "How to use the index.html file" section.
  • If you are an experienced Flash developer looking for source code, go to the "The CaptivatePlayer Source Files" section.

About the author

Jesse Warden is a professional multimedia developer working at Roundbox Media. He specializes in Flex and Flash Development. He has spoken in Sydney Australia at MXDU 2003 and MXDU 2005, multiple Atlanta Macromedia User Groups, Georgia Tech, and other venues about various Macromedia products and technologies. Jesse runs a blog at jessewarden.com where he contributes coding techniques, plug-ins, and sample projects to the community.