“This
harks back to a caveman form of communication where a single picture can convey
a full range of messages and emotions. In the future, less words and letters
will be used in messaging as pictures and icons take over the text speak
language”
Professor of Modern
English Literature at of University College John Sutherland, explaining the
transition from texting to emojis in IM on Mobile Social Networks
I
know a lot about smartphones, which is the main reason why I dislike them so
much as opined in my blog article
entitled “The
Reason why I don't like Smartphones - Location Privacy and How to disable
Location Services on Android and iOS”.
In
fact, I know enough to do smartphone review of such products as the Samsung
Galaxy S6 which was launched in Jamaica at the Jamaica Pegasus on Friday April
24th 2015 as detailed in my Geezam
blog article entitled “The Future is
Now as Samsung Galaxy S6 launches in Jamaica”.
However,
I'm baffled by the latest trend towards the use of emojis as a replacement for
words in online communications as noted in “Emojis
blamed as words lose out to pictures”, published 01.05.2015 BBC News.
He
did a study of some two thousand (2000) parents for Samsung and discovered that
the vast majority of them did not understand the meaning of not only acronyms that
they used in their conversations, but emoticons and now Emojis.
The
results as detailed in the article “Social
media drives fastest ever evolution of English”, published 1 May 2015, ITV are more amusing than shocking:
1. 86%
of parents felt teenagers spoke an entirely different language on social media
sites such as Twitter and Facebook.
2. 43%
said they did not understand the term “fleek” which means looking good
3. 40%
said they did not understand the term “FOMO” (fear of missing out) and “bae” (a
term of affection used for one's significant other)
Parents,
who are mostly Generation X’s (ages 28 to 45) were, surprisingly, unfamiliar
with commonly used acronyms on Social Media which have been around since the
late 90's such as:
1. ICYMI
means “in case you missed it”
2. TBT
means “throwback Thursday”"
3. NSFW
means “not safe for work”
In
fact, as a challenge to yourself, read this list of emojis and name the movie
that each set of emoji's represent.
So
what’s fueling this trend? Are we becoming more like the Chinese or even the
Egyptians, whose language was and is symbolic? And is this going to be the
language of the internet in the future?
Emojis replaces English
symbols in communication - Age of Emojis Trend towards symbolic Language in
Social Media
According
to the author of the study Professor of Modern English Literature John
Sutherland of University College, that may indeed be the case, as symbols
allows us to say more while logged into those Social Media Websites on these
smaller screen communication devices, quote: “The use of audio and visual
messaging has become more commonplace with the soaring popularity of social
media and instant messaging apps such as Instagram, Vine and Snapchat. We are
moving to a more pictographic form of communication with the increasing
popularity of emoticon”.
He
makes a comparison to the days when men lived in caves and evolved their first
proto language based on pictograms of what they saw in the world around them,
basically the first Social Postings on a wall, quote: “This harks back to a
caveman form of communication where a single picture can convey a full range of
messages and emotions. In the future, fewer words and letters will be used in
messaging as pictures and icons take over the text speak language”.
Good
to note that pictorial language evolved into higher languages that were spoken,
with pictorial languages such as Sumerian, Assyrians and later Egyptian and
Asiatic Language such as Chinese and Korean evolving later on. Meanwhile, the West
went with the Phoenicians, whore apparently loved simpler phonetic system that
used a string of symbols with consonant and vowel sounds to creature words.
But
the spread of smartphones and Tablets as noted in my blog article
entitled “IDC
Stats suggest Tablet Freefall in 2015 – How to sell Tablets using built-in
Keyboards and Carrier Unlocked SIM Cards”
and their cumbersome typing method using touch typing means a more efficient
means of conveying a message is needed.
Enter
the Age of Emojis as heralded by the Katy Perry Song Roar.
Emojis in Social Media
- Pictorial language that unites Millennial Globally in one common Tongue
Emojis
are basically pictorial representation of words or phrases combined to make
sentences.
The
video below makes it a little clearer.
They
usually come built into your smartphone but some apps allow you to make your
own custom emojis like the app Emoji as reported in my blog article
entitled “Imoji
for Designing iMessage Emoji – How Japanese Imoji Sticker trend is Rising as
Creative Community and Celebrities can Monetize Stickers”.
They
are mostly used on Mobile Social Networks that have an IM (Instant Messenger)
section such as Snapchat, Twitter, Facebook Messenger and Meerkat and
Periscope, the latest to join the battle for Social Media supremacy as noted in
my blog article
entitled “@Facebook
Messenger Free Video Calling - @Meerkat and @periscopeco's new competitor as
@Digicel_Jamaica defends against @WhatsApp”.
In
fact Snapchat has now incorporated them into Friend Emojis that lets you know
your friend and who's seeking your attention as described in my blog article
entitled “@Snapchat
Best Friends is Friend Emojis - How @Beyonce’s explains why @KimKardashian
Needs Love as Moon says More Light”.
More
recently, Apple has upgraded their list of emojis in iOS 8.3 to include ones
that are more culturally and racially diverse, as nobody has a yellow face, the
original colour of most emoticons and emojis as explained in the article “Diverse
thumbs up! Emojis with different skin tones finally here”, published 8 Apr
2015, BBC News and “How
to access the new diverse emoji in iOS 8.3”, published April 8, 2015 by Jason
Cipriani, CNET News.
The
usage of emojis has now totally replaced the usage of words or even acronyms
and emoticons in messages allowing persons who don't even speak the same
language to communicate as noted in the informal test mentioned in the article “Emojis
versus language, the Newsbeat test”, published 14 Apr 2015 By Anna Doble
and Amelia Butterly, BBC News.
Acronyms from Texting
evolved into emoticons and then Emojis - How Emojis are becoming the Universal
language of the Internet
Acronyms
and emoticons were really made necessary because of the texting craze back in
the early 2000 which IM eventually replaced as noted in my blog article
entitled “CTIA
reports a 5% decline in US Texting as Instant Messaging ramps up - WhatsApp's
now Top Gun as The Dead Zone leads Star Trek Into the Darkness”.
To
quote Professor of Modern English Literature John Sutherland of University
College, this was because of the limitations of handsets back in the early 2000
as well as the high cost of Data plans, quote: “The limitation of characters on
old handsets were a key factor in the rise of acronyms in text messaging such
as TXT, GR8 and M8. However, technological evolution has meant that these words
are now effectively extinct from the text speak language and are seen as
'antique text speak'.”
But
acronyms were really just words using traditional letters; emoticons on the
other hand have carried over into this now pictorial hieroglyphic IM world and
have basically merged with emojis, becoming more detailed and composed less
from letters from your smartphone's virtual keypad.
All
this doesn’t bode well for WhatsApp Voice Calling feature that was launched in
April 2015 as noted in my blog article
entitled “WhatApp
Voice Calling comes to Version 2.12.1 - How Wi-Fi Calling by Proxy coming to
Jamaica with Features to Boot” as the trend is more towards communicating visually,
with Video and emojis being part of that
trend.
Will
this be the language of the future?
I
believe so and I won't be surprised if in the future, they start offering
course in the interpretation of acronyms and emojis. It may soon be used in the
delivery of News, not to mention see more usage of the communication format in
advertising and marketing of products to Millennials (ages 18 to 28) and Teenagers
(ages 13 to 17).
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