Author Topic: Emoticons  (Read 2488 times)

Offline dayers

  • PixInsight Addict
  • ***
  • Posts: 201
    • The Orlop
Emoticons
« on: 2014 January 01 07:15:57 »
Friends,

I started hanging around mail lists, boards, and fora back in the days before it became popular to use smileys and emoticons. I admit I am prejudiced against their use, thinking that words alone should be sufficient to make oneself understood. I wonder if those of you who do not call English your native language find emoticons helpful.

Dave
Dave Ayers
  Stellarvue 80 mm refractor on CG-5 mount, Orion 50mm guide scope. Imaging camera SBIG STF-8300M, guide camera ASI120mm. PHD Guiding. Sequence Generator Pro, PixInsight.

Offline Philip de Louraille

  • PixInsight Addict
  • ***
  • Posts: 289
Re: Emoticons
« Reply #1 on: 2014 January 01 07:42:17 »
The usefulness of emoticons is for the folks you don't really know well or/and don't know you well.
My real (read: we have known each others for years and years and spent much time together) friends will understand what I write and what I mean without the use of emoticons. They know my sense of humor.

The Internet allows an unparalleled method of communication, placing people who have never met in the same 'room'. Emoticons have been invented to minimize mis-communication and mis-interpreting folks thought meanderings. Plus they permit shorter sentences.

That's their "plus". Their "minus" is that emoticons are replacing good writing. The Victor Hugo, Balzac, Voltaire, Keats, ... of their times did not need emoticons to be understood but people back then read long books. That was the method of distraction.
Philip de Louraille

Offline dayers

  • PixInsight Addict
  • ***
  • Posts: 201
    • The Orlop
Re: Emoticons
« Reply #2 on: 2014 January 01 08:58:45 »
Thanks for your thoughtful reply, Philip. I appreciate it. The Internet sure has changed the way we communicate as well as what we read. I know that I am not as comfortable as I used to be reading  long books, to my detriment, I believe.

I suspect what you have said is equally true for native English speakers as it is for second-language folks.

Dave
Dave Ayers
  Stellarvue 80 mm refractor on CG-5 mount, Orion 50mm guide scope. Imaging camera SBIG STF-8300M, guide camera ASI120mm. PHD Guiding. Sequence Generator Pro, PixInsight.