๐ Pocket Bell Pagers & Emojis
During the height of their popularity in Japan, a pager was commonly referred to as a "pocket bell" (ใใฑใใใใซ, poketto beru, or pokeberu ใใฑใใซ).
One such pocket bell device released by Japanese mobile phone operator Docomo in March 1995 is recognized as being one of the earliest devices on which users could directly send emoji-like symbols to one another's devices.
Specifically, users were able to send a simple pixel heart design (โค) to one another by dialling “88” or “89” when sending a message to another user's pager. The devices also featured a telephone (โ) symbol.
The popularity of this feature amongst Japan's youth has consistently been cited by Shigetaka Kurita as a direct source of inspiration when creating Docomo's 1999 emoji set.
Emoji Playground์ ์ด๋ชจ์ง
๋ ๋ณด๊ธฐ์์ ์ด๋ฒคํธ
๋ ๋ณด๊ธฐ์ต๊ทผ ์์
๋ ๋ณด๊ธฐEmojipedia's New, Free-To-Use AI Emoji Generator
Today, to mark Cyber Monday, Emojipedia has launched a brand new feature within its Emoji Playground: the AI Emoji Generator. This free and easy-to-us...
Emojis for Saying โThank Youโ
Itโs that time of year when many of us gobble up some Thanksgiving grub and express our gratitude for the abundance in our lives. Saying thanks in the...
Draft Emoji List for 2025/2026 Revealed
Unicode has revealed which new emojis could be finding their way to our standard emoji keyboards late next year. These possible new emojis include a d...