Decoding the Mystery of Emojis: 10 Shocking Facts Revealed
These days, digital communication goes far beyond typing a few words or sentences and clickingSend . Just look at anysocial network or open your last few text messages to see how many smiley faces, hearts, animals, food, and other image-based characters you can spot. These are emoji.
Those iconic little images are more popular on theinternet now than ever before. There are so many of them that Emoji translators are available to help you figure outwhat they mean .
Emoji are here to stay as long as we all continue tweeting and texting. Here are a few interesting facts about those crazy, colorful little emoji that prove just how much the world loves them.
Apple Is Credited for Emoji Popularity
Emoji have been around since 1999 when Japanese designer Shigetaka Kurita made the first emoji for cellphones, but they weren’t fully embraced by the masses until 2012 when Apple released iOS 6.
iPhone users quickly learned they couldactivate the emoji keyboard in iOS 6 to add fun smileys and tiny icons in their text messages.
Apple later introducedanimoji , which are animated emoji in 2017.
The Museum of Modern Art owns and displays Kurita’s original set of emoji.
Emoji on X (formerly Twitter) Are Tracked in Real Time
Want to see how many people around the world are tweeting out emoji? You can do that with a tool calledEmoji Tracker , described as being “an experiment in real-time visualization” of all emoji found on X.
It constantly updates based on emoji information it pulls from X so that you can see the number count beside each emoji increase right before your eyes. The change is so rapid, the website bears a warning to anyone with sensitivity to rapidly blinking lights.
Emoji Was Added to Oxford Dictionaries in 2013
The emoji craze caught on so rapidly in 2012 and 2013 that it was added as a word by Oxford Dictionaries in August 2013, along with several other strange new words that could only be explained by the internet.
New emoji are being added all the time. In 2017 the Unicode Consortium finalized 69 new ones including a vampire, a genie, a mermaid, and many more.
If your mobile device is still running on an older OS version, you’ll want to update it as soon as a new version is released to make sure you get access to all these new and fun emoji.
New emoji are released each year. In 2018,157 new emoji were added.
Title: Discovering Mobile Tracking Techniques on iOS Devices - Find Out Whereabouts!