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Path: ...!news.mixmin.net!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Ben Collver <bencollver@tilde.pink> Newsgroups: comp.misc Subject: Emoji History: The Missing Years Date: Mon, 13 May 2024 01:14:36 -0000 (UTC) Organization: A noiseless patient Spider Lines: 370 Message-ID: <slrnv42pt8.liu.bencollver@svadhyaya.localdomain> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Injection-Date: Mon, 13 May 2024 03:14:36 +0200 (CEST) Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="ade2df38eff6747ff8deaf5fcf3e8bd1"; logging-data="3245654"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX19n5YW6cqHcDDs3uEHMmHA5v5372gNFOhg=" User-Agent: slrn/1.0.3 (Linux) Cancel-Lock: sha1:qRx7SKTsdKPkwGArPyf/S70P6Bo= Bytes: 16759 Emoji History: The Missing Years ♥ ================================== 2024-05-12 by @gingerbeardman During my research into vintage Japanese drawing software, I came across some devices that had built in sketch or handwritten memo functions. I bought a couple of them to see if they did anything cool or interesting. These sorts of devices are pre-internet, so there's no much about them online, and they can't be emulated, so the only way to find out what they do is to get first hand experience by reading the manual or, better, using one yourself. It's difficult to find these devices in working condition, as most of them have screen polarisers that have gone bad over time, but if you're lucky you can find one. <https://blog.gingerbeardman.com/2023/10/21/ list-of-vintage-japanese-pixel-dot-art-software/> 1994 ==== One such device I bought was the Sharp PI-4000, from 1994. This is a pocket computer that rolled out of Sharp's involvement in the development and manufacturing of Apple's Newton MessagePad. In 1993 Sharp did their own licenced version of the Apple Newton MessagePad H1000, the Expert Pad PI-7000, but just like Apple's device it wasn't as successful as they'd hoped. But before that, in 1992, they'd made a device called the PV-F1 which was the first touchscreen-only PDA. After the Expert Pad failure, Sharp took another attempt at the concept and came up with the PI-3000 in 1993. This solved all the problems with the PV-F1, most notably size and cost. The device I have, the PI-4000, was released a year later and features higher memory capacity. The PI-3000/4000 devices could transfer data via infrared, connect to a modem to send faxes, and by the PI-5000 in 1995 could connect to cell phones to send emails. They all use a simplified—but still quite complicated—version of the multi-window operating system that had been developed for the PV-F1. <https://cdn.gingerbeardman.com/images/posts/ emoji-history-sharp-pi-3000.jpg> <https://apple.fandom.com/wiki/MessagePad_H1000> <https://apple.fandom.com/wiki/Sharp_Expert_Pad_PI-7000> Sharp Zaurus PI-3000 "Personal Information Tool" (1993) ======================================================= So I was trying out the PI-4000, the memo function is pretty cool allowing you to draw in different dither shades and pen widths, and use stamps to add symbols to your memo. These are mostly map-related things like road and rail junctions, buildings, and train stations. Pretty cool. Then I tried typing some messages on the device and as I explored the myriad of keyboard input mechanisms I came across something rather familiar (sorry about the awful photo—it's the best I could do, honest—the screen is very reflective and the pixels are so far from the backing they cast individual shadows!): <https://cdn.gingerbeardman.com/images/posts/ emoji-history-sharp-pi-4000-emoji-picker.jpg> Look! It's an emoji picker on the Sharp PI-4000 (1994) At this point, I couldn't quite believe what I was seeing because I was under the impression that the first emoji were created by an anonymous designer at SoftBank in 1997, and the most famous emoji were created by Shigetaka Kurita at NTT DoCoMo in 1999. But the Sharp PI-4000 in my hands was released in 1994, and it was chock full of recognisable emoji. Then down the rabbit hole I fell. <https://emojipedia.org/softbank/1997> <https://emojipedia.org/docomo/1999> <https://cdn.gingerbeardman.com/images/posts/ emoji-history-sharp-pi-4000-emoji-table-16-16.png> Emoji present on the Sharp PI-4000 (1994) 1991 ==== A little more reading, and a tip from my friend @chamekan on Twitter, unearthed the fact that the NEC PI-ET1 in 1991 also contained emoji. The device is literally the coolest thing you've ever seen. With system software written by video game developer Hudson Soft its character set features emoji that can be typed inline, and it also features a "montage function" that allows you to create faces for each of your contacts--15 years later we'd see something similar in Mii on Nintendo Wii in 2006. The emoji on this device are a lot less well designed, in my humble opinion, than those on the Sharp devices. <https://twitter.com/chame> <https://youtu.be/8_w8elG3w0Y?t=248> <https://cdn.gingerbeardman.com/images/posts/ emoji-history-nec-pi-et1-emoji-table-20-20.png> Emoji present on the NEC PI-ET1 (1991) A word about word processors ============================ By now I was in contact with Keith at Emojipedia, who mentioned that he remembered a Sharp device with emoji, a word processor. I found one in the Sharp WD-A521, from November 1990, which featured higher resolution versions of the emoji designs found on my Sharp PI-4000. <https://emojipedia.org/> <http://kanji.zinbun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~yasuoka/Emoji/ SHARP-WD-A521p457-458.pdf> Perhaps there are other word processors from around that time that also contain emoji? I understand from my friend Izumi Okano that Japanese software developer Enzan-Hoshigumi, most famous for their Macintosh software and clipart, had created pictograms for one of the Canoword word processors around 1986. So at this point I'm thinking, why would the emoji on a word processor be ignored on the timeline of emoji history? Was there anything else being ignored? <https://twitter.com/haeckel> <https://blog.gingerbeardman.com/2021/12/16/ tomoya-ikeda-macintosh-artist/> Before cell phones became prevalent there were pagers, or beepers, in Japan these were known as Pocket Bell. Initially they would only beep and show a number, and people would use "beeper slang" to form words by using numbers whose pronunciation was similar to words and syllables. Necessity is the mother of invention! Eventually pagers would be able to send and receive text. It was perhaps only natural that emoji find a home on these devices, with the most notable being the heart ❤️ emoji. But the date of this transition is 1995, which is earlier than the SoftBank emoji from 1997 but later than my Sharp PI-4000 device. <https://twitter.com/s7ephenwithaph/status/1785939813432254950> A note about beepers ==================== As an aside, it's interesting to understand how emoji were typed on pagers/beepers. They weren't selected using a picker, which would have required cycling through a huge range of characters, but rather typed in numeric digits which narrows the cycling down to far less characters. <https://cdn.gingerbeardman.com/images/posts/ emoji-history-pocket-bell-pager.jpg> Pager cheat sheet <https://ima.goo.ne.jp/column/article/6981.html> > The numeric code: 21 91 15 24 12 23 78 > ... would map to: カラオケイク? > ... which means: KARAOKE? Wild. Typing text this way must have felt like programming machine code directly in hexadecimal! What makes it emoji? ==================== I was chatting to my friend Louie Mantia, who has designed many emoji in his career, discussing the earlier emoji I had found in my 1994 device. Louie asked me to confirm that I could type emoji inline with text, giving me the example W😲W, which was his criteria for the symbols to qualify as emoji. If I couldn't do that, he suggested we could only consider the symbols as icons. <https://lmnt.me/blog/> <https://cdn.gingerbeardman.com/images/posts/ emoji-history-sharp-pi-4000-emoji-wow.jpg> Passing the Emoji test on the Sharp PI-4000 So if I can type them inline amongst text on my device from 1994 that was capable of connecting to other devices and sending messages, then surely they should be considered the first emoji? Why do we, currently, only count emoji as emoji if they're on a mobile phone? I'm also wondering when these emoji might have been designed. Were they created in 1994 for the PI-4000, in 1993 for the PI-3000, or earlier for another device? ========== REMAINDER OF ARTICLE TRUNCATED ==========