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smiley posts

Filed under: Design, Fun, Internet, Social Software

Happy 25th Birthday, Emoticon

Happy Birthday :-)Twenty Five years ago, a clever University professor added a colon to a right parenthesis and thus changed the course of human events. Ok, maybe we're overstating the social and cultural impact of the emoticon but, you'll have to admit, love them or not, they're everywhere.

Scott E. Fahlman dreamed up the sideways smiley in a discussion about how to denote comments meant to be taken lightly. The message posted on September 19th 1982 on a bulletin board system at 11:44am, Fahlman floated the idea to some compatriots. Responding with statements like "OMG" and "ROTFL!", his online audience liked the idea, and the little sideways smiley that could spread quickly through an Internet the size of some current LANs. The smiley has seen many variations over the years, denoting a range of emotions from happy to sad, snarky to shaudenfrude.

To mark the smiley's 25th birthday, Fahlman and friends have started an annual student contest promoting innovation in technology based person-to-person communication. The Smiley Award, as it's appropriately called, is sponsored by Yahoo and carries a $500 cash prize.

The instigator of "LOL" was unavailable for comment.

Filed under: Internet, E-mail

When is an emoticon inappropriate?

EmoticonsThe New York Times ran a lengthy article on emoticons this weekend. It's a must read for anyone who can decipher this symbol ~(_8^(I), or for anyone who can't but would like to.

While the Times gives a brief history of the emoticon, with the first modern usage traced back to 1982, the juicy bits involve the creep of emoticons from casual conversations into the professional arena. For example, if you're writing someone to let them know that a business deal worth thousands or millions of dollars is about to fall through, a frowny face just isn't going to have the same impact as a phone call.

We're betting that a lot of Download Squad readers grew up with emoticons and don't have to turn their head sideways to decipher any but the most complex smileys. But have you noticed yourself wanting to type a quick smiley, wink, or frown into a message to your boss?

Given that sarcasm and other nuances are hard to get across using nothing but text, emoticons offer a sort of shortcut. And when you're typing a note to a friend in a hurry, that's probably OK. But sometimes it's worth taking the long way to say something that's worth saying.

What do you think? Are emoticons the downfall of human civilization as we know it, an evolutionary step in written communication, or something in between?

Filed under: Fun, Web services

Ask.com adds... emoticon search?

Ask.com emoticon searchThe latest post at the Ask.com blog begins, "For a long time people have wanted the ability to search for terms and phrases on the web using non-letter (A-Z) characters. Put another way, searching using non-alphanumeric characters." This is a promising start--I've occasionally been annoyed by the fact that Google interprets almost all non-alphanumeric characters as spaces--but then things go off in a different direction: emoticons. I really wasn't aware that there were so many people crying out for a way to find the meanings of certain emoticons, but apparently there are. As a result, you can now search for :) or >:-( or :-O and Ask.com will tell you, via what it calls the Smart Answer box, what it's supposed to mean. Ask.com doesn't really say how many emoticons it knows, but it does seem to be missing some like :-[ and it also doesn't seem to differentiate between upper- and lowercase, so it interprets :-d as the same as :-D ("laughing, big smile"). It does, however, toss at least one non-emoticon into the mix, which the geeks in the audience will recognize: /. , as well as some popular acronyms like LOL and BRB. It even has WTF (uncensored!) but not, curiously, OMG.

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With Halloween fast approaching, it's a great time to get in some practice defending your territory against zombies. In Graveyard Shift, you take aim at zombies and other creepy-crawlies, blasting them into splatters of cartoony green guts. It's a casual first-person shooter, and it's very easy to get the hang of - use the mouse to aim, click to fire. Graveyard Shift has at least 15 levels, and it might even have some secret stages I haven't unlocked yet. They key to getting good at Graveyard Shift is learning to use ...

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