ahmik: (Default)

From: [personal profile] ahmik


I very seldom use more than one emoji at a time. Simply me. But I can't stand emoji storms, where people create essays out of the damned things. Or they include ten of the same emoji in a row. What's that about? Afraid I'll miss the point?

Skapi
ravan: by  sarah9380 (smiley - sarah9380)

From: [personal profile] ravan


Emojis can be fun. I will use them as punctuation emphasis. They're not a substitute for words.
dubhain: (Default)

From: [personal profile] dubhain


Necessary evil.

I generally dislike them, but I use them a lot and find them useful. Text-based communication is notoriously imprecise and a horrible medium for conveying nuance and the sort of emotional subtext generally passed via body language and vocal inflection. Emojis, imperfectly, help bridge this information gap.
arlie: (Default)

From: [personal profile] arlie


I find them useful especially as a reaction to someone else's post, in systems that support this, such as Slack:
1) you can post encouragement/reaction without starting a conversation
2) it's easier for an Aspie to fake normal reactions with emojis (if everyone's using them) than with actual text, which can be helpful in work environments

But: beware that the emoji you type on your Apple device may be different when your friend sees it on their Android device (unconfirmed, but suspected), and/or the vocabulary available won't match, and the names often totally fail to match what the picture suggests to me. So maybe you aren't "saying" quite what you intended.

.

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