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by bccdee
2070 days ago
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Ok, but how do you feel about this? A laughing emoji would let us know that you think it's funny that people are this inarticulate, although it'd be a touch condescending. An eye-roll emoji would indicate a frustration with the problem, suggesting that it personally affects you in some way — perhaps your relatives are using too many emojis and it irritates you personally. A frown emoji, meanwhile, would suggest a more sincere concern for the state of written communication in our culture, and would imply that you think something important is being lost. Explaining the meaning of those three unicode characters in context took an additional 480 characters. Can you see why people use them? They're very efficient. |
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- There are over 3,000 emojis defined in unicode, which is a very large vocabulary in which to become expert.
- There is no well-defined meaning for any of the emojis, even the "simple" common ones. One must try to infer from shared context what the sender means. This is fraught with error opportunities.
- They mean different things to different subgroups, and act as an "in-group" credential in many cases.
- They are visually very indistinct, and can be difficult to distinguish one from another for people who have less than perfect vision, or color-blindness.
- For people with autism or other non-neurotypical processing they can be completely unintelligible, rendering the communication even less successful than "traditional" language.
In short, emojis are undefined, colloquial, designed for only a small portion of the population, and have constantly shifting interpretations of a vast dictionary of symbols.
I don't know why that's a good idea for improving the clarity of communication.