Thursday, August 11, 2011

A History Of Emoticons - Where Did Emoticons Come From?

Emoticons, those little marks found in reports on the World Wide Web, are tools to understand. Communication in the text lacks the body language and facial expressions to help convey meaning. Emoticon, small signs that the emotional overtone of an explanation, help replace that lost significance. They are not unique to computer systems. In the heyday of amateur radio, using Morse code was a humorous remark at the end by sending "HI" to avoid misunderstandings. Modern emoticons can be more elaborate, but they still serve the same purpose.

Emoticons For Personal Computers

Emoticons existed long before computers sat on desks or laps when they lived in big boxes in rooms. These computers were not owned by individuals but by schools, businesses, research institutions and government. Smaller institutions leased access people's computers. Information was often not even recorded in real time. Data were beaten in tape or cards and later went off-line, often by someone else. Without the use of emoticons, the potential for spread misunderstandings, especially comments meant to be funny, especially if the humor was a dry black or natural.

Emoticons are vital, even for users interactive access to a computer. This usually meant sitting at a keyboard, perhaps in another room of the computer and maybe in another state or country. Emoticons are a real help in adding emotional meaning to their input.

This first emoticons are not displayed on monitors with cathode ray tubes. They were typed on a roll of paper on an electromechanical typewriter called a telex, which was also used for communication. Emoticons can be developed by professional teletype operators and a range of expressive combinations of characters to the emotional content of their message across. These few early emoticons evolved into the incredible diversity that we know today.

Early home computers

Emoticons arrived at the home of desktops, with computers .. When small groups of characters were called smileys. These emoticons, composed of symbols and stared at us like green or yellow monochrome screens. ASCII emoticons were perfect for these monitors, they were not able to handle large graphic, but they were three :-) O :-) angel and devil with ease.

This generation of the emoticon is designed to look like faces sideways. In languages ​​read from left to right, a colon or any other character indicative of the eyes is the leftmost part of the glyph. The center of emoticons is something that a nose, often a hyphen. On the right is a mouth that can hook a smiling, yawning a letter O or a frown his bracket. More elaborate emoticons can use many more characters, eventually merging in the form of ASCII art that may be one or more pages in size.

Early on emoticons to messages on the dial-up bulletin boards operated by schools, businesses, computer clubs or even individuals. Access to the Internet became more widely available, smile surfaced on newsgroups, web forums broad that almost any subject treated. Emoticon soon migrated to e-mails, which could resemble their natural surroundings. There was no authority assigning meaning to emoticons, but users quickly learned how to interpret the most common.

The nature of emoticons changed with the advent of advanced graphics cards and color monitors. Combinations of ASCII characters were just not enough anymore. Web-based message boards, email and chat programs and even word processors began to replace text-based emoticon graphic versions, often automatically. A user typed character combinations that he had used for years, and watched it turn into a colorful icon, even an animated one. Emoticons had come of age.

These small images, called emoticons, automatically replace the text that a user has entered. The collections of emoticons available in these programs became more and more elaborate as time went on. When a user of emoticons agree could be also expressed as and limited to a very limited number of variations, they could now use: confused: or: squint: or: unsure: or: penguin: if they wanted. Emoticons had come of age.



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