Captivate Playback Limitations

I recently received the following email from A. Charles Zoffuto:

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Subject: Captivate Limitations

Kevin,

You mentioned that Captivate has a max frame limit. What was that again?

Also is that count affected by the size?

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Great questions Charles!

The maximum number of frames that the Flash player can render is 16,000 frames. If your Captivate movies exceeds that number, your movie will stop playing. Ouch!

The frame count is affected most by the amount of interactivity and number of objects you have in your movie. To keep the frame count reasonable, I’d recommend keeping your slide count between 70-80 slides, max. If you need to show more of a lesson than will fit in 80 slides, consider breaking the movie into two different movies. You can always link them together!

For more information on the frame limitation of the Flash player, visit http://www.adobe.com/cfusion/knowledgebase/index.cfm?id=tn_14437.

Hybrid CBTs Deliver a Powerful Learning Punch

Macromedia/Adobe Captivate is a wonderful tool for creating software simulations, also known as Computer Based Training (CBT). While recording your Captivate movies in automatic mode, you have a few recording options including:

Demonstration: Automatically includes captions, highlight boxes and mouse movements. Assessment Simulation: Automatically includes click boxes and failure captions, but does not capture your mouse movements.

Training Simulation: Automatically adds click boxes that include hint and failure captions. Mouse movements are not captured.

Learn One Thing from Kevin Siegel: Hybrid CBTs Deliver a Powerful Learning Punch

Demonstration mode is the most popular for new users because it is the easiest type of movie to create. As a CBT developer, you simply start Captivate, step-through the lesson and Captivate creates the movie for you. The movie comes complete with mouse-movements that show the mouse traveling across the screen and captions that explain what is happening. You do not have to create the mouse animation nor the captions. Captivate does it all for you. Unlike Assessment mode, there are no click boxes that enable user interactivity. When watching the demonstration, a user is not required to interact with the movie at all. The user simply needs to sit back and watch as the lessons plays-much like watching a television show or movie.

Assessment simulations are arguably the second most popular kind of movie to create in Captivate. As with demonstration movies, you start Captivate, step through the lesson and Captivate creates the movie. Unlike Demonstration mode, there are no captions containing instructions telling the user what to do. Learners must successfully perform the correct action to move to the next step. If the learner clicks in the wrong place, they come face-to-face with a failure caption, but that’s the extent of the communication between the simulation and the learner.

Flaws in the Learning Experience

Between Demonstration and Assessment CBTs, which type of movie will result in the most effective learning experience for your users? Neither! Both are flawed and here’s why:

Pure demonstration CBTs do not allow for user interaction. By forcing the learner to watch, but not touch, the level of learning is minimized. The captions that are automatically created for you by Captivate are great, but they are written in the active force. For instance, an automatically-generated caption is likely to say "Select the File Menu." Upon reading that caption, a user is likely to follow the caption’s instructions and attempt to select the File menu. Unfortunately, at the same time that the user is trying to interact with the simulation, the mouse pointer that Captivate created is also moving across the screen. The result is, at best, confusion for the user. An opportunity to let the user learn by doing has been lost.

Pure assessment movies can be worse. Since this mode does not add any captions, there are instructions telling the user what to do or what to expect. The user will either perform the required steps or click wildly, hoping for the best.

So What Do You Do?

So here’s what many Captivate developers do to get around the weaknesses inherent in both modes: create a demonstration movie and an assessment movie. That’s all well and good until you remember that it could take several hours to "clean up" the movies so that the timing for the captions and other interactive elements are perfect. Since you now have one movie showing the demonstration, and one showing the assessment, you’ve made twice the work for yourself.

The Answer: Create a Hybrid Movie

Instead of creating two different movies and investing the resources making both movies perfect, create a hybrid movie that incorporates the best of both modes. Here’s how:

1. In Captivate, choose Options > Recording Options.

2. On the Recording Options tab, ensure Enable auto recording is selected

3. Select Demonstration from the Recording mode pick list.

4. Click the Edit settings button

5. Select Text captions (to ensure Captivate automatically adds the captions for you)

6. Select Click boxes for mouse clicks and then Failure captions (so that learners who click in the wrong place see a message telling them what they should have done)

7. Remove the check mark from Show Mouse. (The simulation is supposed to feel like the user is using the software. Removing the simulated mouse will enhance the realism.)

Learn One Thing from Kevin Siegel: Hybrid CBTs Deliver a Powerful Learning Punch

8. Click OK.

When you record the movie, you will end up with a movie that bridges the gap between a demonstration and assessment movie. You will also notice that the captions created by Captivate (because you selected Text captions from the Custom Recording Options) are written in the active voice and encourage learner participation.

Document for Creating Captivate Scripts

I’ve written dozens and dozens of scripts for clients that have been used in Captivate and RoboDemo movies. I usually use a specific document when I create the scripts. A student asked how much I would charge per download if people wanted to buy the document on my site.

I do not believe the document has much value. Instead, it’s the content that my client’s pay for. So here’s a link to a Word document that you can use for free. Mind you, it’s not an actual script from any client (that wouldn’t be kosher). Instead, feel free to use the document–it may help you on your way to script-writing success.

Captivate Movie Check-Off Sheet

As I travel the country teaching Captivate, I always spend the first 40 minutes going over a check-list students should go through before creating the first movie. I’ve been putting basically the same information up on the board for a few years. Much of the information is taken straight from my Essentials of Macromedia Captivate book. And some of it has evolved as I’ve created movie after movie for my own clients.

Not long ago a student asked me if what I put on the board was written somewhere. I replied that some of it is in the book but that I’d put the list on my BLOG.

As promised, here it is.

Captivate Emails that Automatically Include a Subject and Body

During a recent class, a student asked how an email sent from Captivate could automatically include the subject and body information.

The following was provided by Michael Dunmire from the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General who recently attended one of my classes:

When inserting a click box or button that you intend to use for sending an email, you can type the following:

someguy@someplace.com?subject=Captivate%20Presentation&body=Body%20goes%20here&cc=someotherguy@someplace.com

Provided your email client supports the tag, the email that is generated would have the following information pre-filled:

To: someguy@someplace.com

CC: someotherguy@someplace.com

Subject: Captivate Presentation

Body: Body goes here

Captivate Errata Sheet Posted

I posted an errata sheet for my "Essentials of Macromedia Captivate" book today at http://www.iconlogic.com/Captivate.htm.

The main thing covered in the errata sheet is updates to the LMS lessons beginning on page 169. The software you use to upload SCOs changed so I updated the book and screen shots in the book to reflect the changes.

The PDF has notes detailing the changes.

Macromedia Captivate Labs Posted and Available Now

I know it’s long overdue, but I recently posted some challenge labs to the site. The labs support my "Essentials of Macromedia Captivate" book.

If you’d like to try the challenge labs, go to iconlogic.com, click the Learning Center link, then the Captivate and RoboDemo link. Once there, click the projects link. This will take you directly to my Learning Management System (LMS). You can also go directly to the LMS by clicking here. There is no charge to access the Lab movies.

Controlling Playback Control “Hints”

I was asked how to control the "hints" or "tool tips" that appear on some Captivate and RoboDemo playback controls.

Assuming you have Captivate installed on your computer, go to the following folder:

C:\Program Files\Macromedia\Captivate\Gallery\PlaybackControls

You’ll notice that some toolbar images have the names like Captivate-exitbuttonup.bmp. For those toolbar buttons that sport "Tool Tips" or "Hints" there is a companion image such as Captivate-exitbuttonhint.bmp.

If you want to get rid of the "hint," rename the "hint" image (such as the Captivate-exitbuttonhint.bmp image mentioned above).

If you want to create your own "Hint" for any of the existing Playback Control sets, create an image for those buttons that don’t have hint images and name them using the names of the button you are giving the hint for (a button called KevinOver.bmp should get a "hint" image called KevinOverhint.bmp.)

Helpful Links for Captivate and RoboDemo Developers

I was recently asked to recommend some helpful Web sites for Captivate and RoboDemo developers. Here’s a short list:

Help Community: http://www.helpcommunity.ehelp.com/

Free Sounds: http://www.grsites.com/sounds/

RoboDemo Tips & Tricks: http://www.pcabcs.com/robo/tips/start.htm

More RoboDemo & Captivate Tips & Tricks: http://www.raisingaimee.co.uk/

Background images: http://www.backgroundcity.com/

Since PowerPoint slides can be imported into Captivate and the slides used as a Captivate backgrounds, check out these free PowerPoint template sites:

http://www.soniacoleman.com/templates.htm

http://www.brainybetty.com/

http://www.websiteestates.com/education/templatesindex.html

Customized Playback Controls and Captions: http://www.pcabcs.com/robo/tips/start.htm

As with all free things on the Web, caveat emptor, or buyer beware…