This post is a challenge. I’ll get to the challenge at the end. For now, let’s look at this fictitious company called, Dundeal Mifflearn. Good news is, you’re hired! Bad
Every year, you start the calendar with blank, grey months to fill in with colors. You may never notice this colorful change daily, but you’ve probably done a lot in
Sunday afternoon and it’s raining. After two hours of R (Data Science course), I needed a break. Hence the Articulate eLearning Heroes challenge below. I wanted to create an old-school
Several people connected with me on how to capture the user’s name and use it inside Rise as in this example. Well, this was my first exploration with Rise in
Two weeks ago when the Exim vulnerability (RETURN OF THE WIZARD – CVE-2019-10149) exposed half of the internet to root level access to hackers, my EX hosting company (Bluehost) was
What’s RiseWise? Recently I’ve been using Articulate Rise for performance support and quick learning projects. Project 99 where we’re building up 99 JavaScript examples for Storyline (and Rise) is one
UPDATE: since the January Articulate Storyline update, this example won’t work if you’re trying to replicate it for various reasons. Many of you asked how the character moves to a
eLearning Heroes challenge #202 called for some drag and drop interactions to demonstrate. I’ve decided to build an example that shows some advanced techniques. I ended up adding lots of
Storyline in Rise Articulate Rise can now embed a Storyline block for interaction. Someone asked me if it’s possible to have multiple Storyline blocks in a page. The challenge with
Year of 2018 Sum-up: From being unemployed through #2 behind Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States of America at the ATD International Conference and Exposition, to seven