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by praptak
4948 days ago
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Sometimes you need to know about encodings, even if you're just a consumer. Putting just one non 7-bit character in your SMS message will silently change its encoding from 7-bit (160 chars) to 8-bit (140 chars) or even 16 bit (70 chars) which might make the phone split it into many chunks. The resulting chunks are billed as separate messages. |
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By doing this full of excuses write-up, this guy wasted a substantial amount of time that he could have spent better researching the issue. Your consumer doesn't care that Emoji is this much or that much bits, it doesn't matter for him that you're running your infrastructure on poorly chosen software - there is absolutely no excuse for not supporting this in a native iOS app, especially now that Emoji is so widely used and deeply integrated in iOS.
How is that a problem they are focusing on, anyway, when their landing page features awful, out of date mockups of the app? (not even actual screenshots - notice the positions of menu bar items) They are also featuring Emoji in every screenshot - ending support might be a fresh development, but I still find that ironic.