Emoji and Emoticon ~ Running up Huge Bills for Using Them
Posted on the 06 February 2015 by Sampathkumar Sampath
Communication is an
art ~ in olden days, people used to write letters – on post cards, inland
letters, plain paper sent in postal covers, printed greeting cards and more –
later e-mail evolved; now it is SMS – social media era. Rather than mere words, usage of graphics and
symbols, can enhance expression of feelings such as happiness, anger, surprise,
sadness and more.
A Raised fist : fist raised in the air used as a
celebratory gesture: the fist pump. It is also used to represent zero items,
due to a lack of any fingers being held up.
Folded hands : Two hands placed firmly together, meaning
please or thank you in Japanese culture – though would mean prayer and thank
you in Indian culture.
Samples
of ‘Emoji’ - the ideograms or smileys used in Japanese electronic messages and
webpages, the use of which is spreading outside Japan.
Originally meaning pictograph, the word emoji literally means
"picture" (e) + "character" (moji). Some emoji are very specific to Japanese
culture, such as a bowing businessman, a face wearing a face mask, a white
flower used to denote "brilliant homework," or a group of emoji
representing popular foods.
Although originally
only available in Japan, some emoji character sets have been incorporated into
Unicode, allowing them to be used elsewhere as well. As a result, some phones
such as the Windows Phone and the iPhone, and the Android lines allow access to the symbols without
requiring a Japanese carrier. Emoji have also started appearing in emailing
services such as Gmail and websites. The
exact appearance of Emoji is not prescribed but varies between fonts, in the
same way that normal typefaces can display a letter differently. There has been attempts to include more
diverse range of skin colourings to the popular emoji icons.
It is likely that
you would have used or have been using ‘emojis’ – BBC and other newssites
report that people using emoji text messages could be racking up big bills. It is stated that Consumer website
MoneySavingExpert has received a large number of complaints about the issue. It
seems to affect older models of phones, including some Samsung and Apple
handsets. In Scotland, a woman ran up bills totalling over £1,000 after adding
emoticons to text messages. The happy
face that one sends may turn themselves ‘sad’ as the issue revolves around how
the handset interprets the icons. In some cases, especially on older handsets,
the emoticons are converted into MMS (multi-media service) messages, which can
cost high for the user. Some expressed surprise as to how a small
emoji added could make it a picture message.
~ and some apps (such as Facebook) that integrate with a customer's
contact list in their smartphone may result in an MMS charge too," – it is
stated.
For people like us
– there is confusion on ‘what is an emoji and what is emoticon’…… it appears
that emoji is a rather open set of
pictorial icons. Even though the set is
generally limited by the cellphone company which makes the phone, potentially
it could include pretty much. Emoticons
on the other hand are generally a limited set of icons which, by definition,
express an emotion of one kind or another.
Most are based on cartoon-like faces, although there are
exceptions. While emoticons originated
as text, and even today encompass both text (i.e. a simple form of ASCII art)
and actual pictures, emoji have always been just pictures.
~ - emoticons come
in two flavours: text and image. Text
emoticons are the original version.
Images are a more recent version, and most text emoticons have a pictorial
version. Image emoticons are de facto
emoji. In someways, they are the subset
of emoji used for expressing emotions.
Text emoticons may thus be considered precursors of emoji, which have
nonetheless developed in their own way and remain relevant.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
6th Feb
2015.