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[Technology 1831] Re: Low-cost or free LMS?

Guckert, Denise A

dg21 at txstate.edu
Thu Dec 18 11:20:29 EST 2008


I installed a test of Dokeos LMS (open source) a while back on my Windows XP machine and it ran well. I like the interface, and it has some scorm compatibility. They have a free service to upload courses, though it is not full featured - you can see the free service at http://campus.dokeos.com and get info on the main website at www.dokeos.com<http://www.dokeos.com>.
From: technology-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:technology-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Goldberg, Marsha
Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2008 1:46 PM
To: The Technology and Literacy Discussion List
Subject: [Technology 1823] Re: Low-cost or free LMS?

Shannon;

Tell your client to try myicourse.com It's very simple (not nearly as sophisticated at Moodle) but much easier to use and has great support.

The Technology and Literacy Discussion List <technology at nifl.gov<mailto:technology at nifl.gov>> on Thursday, December 11, 2008 at 6:41 AM -0800 wrote:
I have a client who would like to share demos of some of their e-learning health courses in a secure Web environment. Is there a user friendly, relatively inexpensive way to do this? Is Moodle a good option for SCORM-compliant courses that have been created using software like Articulate Presenter or Authorware? The client wants to limit access to the demos and isn't ready to invest in a full LMS.

Thanks,

Shannon

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