我显然在这里冒险直接宣传表情符号。
It took four years until 2011’s iOS 5 gave everyone an emoji keyboard

原始链接: https://unsung.aresluna.org/im-obviously-taking-a-risk-here-by-advertising-emoji-directly/

在2011年之前,表情符号并非iPhone的标准配置——最初仅限于日本型号。一位足智多谋的开发者史蒂文·索顿-史密斯发现iOS中隐藏的一项偏好设置,可以在所有iPhone上启用表情符号,但激活它需要技术知识。 这引发了一波旨在简化此过程的App Store应用程序。然而,苹果最初抵制,拒绝了像“Freemoji”这样的应用程序,可能出于控制方面的担忧。开发者巧妙地通过将表情符号启用器嵌入到看似无关的应用程序中来规避这一限制——例如RSS阅读器或数字拼写游戏,并通过隐藏的“彩蛋”激活。 苹果最终让步,允许应用程序公开宣传表情符号支持。尽管如此,直到2011年的iOS 5才实现普遍的表情符号访问,并且需要用户手动启用键盘。这段奇特的时期凸显了一个有趣的时间,当时一个很酷的功能被锁定在设备中,只能通过晦涩的方法和一点数字侦查来访问。早期采用还需要发送者和接收者都启用该功能才能正确显示。

这个Hacker News讨论围绕苹果公司历史上对表情符号的不情愿。一位用户指出,甚至*讨论*表情符号都存在风险,引发了回复,强调在表情符号在2010年代随着Unicode采用而普及之前,技术格局是多么不同。 一位评论员指出,现在批评苹果很容易,但史蒂夫·乔布斯的动机不仅仅是控制。文本编码的复杂性,尤其是在早期的短信中,确实存在真正的挑战。苹果谨慎是有充分理由的。 有趣的是,另一位用户表示,早在90年代就开始使用表情符号,表明虽然没有成为主流,但它们在苹果公司采用之前就存在于小众社区中。该讨论源于一个关于苹果公司最初*为什么*抵制表情符号的问题。
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原文

It’s hard to imagine it now, but during iPhone’s first year, no emoji were available at all. It took four years until 2011’s iOS 5 gave everyone an emoji keyboard.

But in between 2008 and 2011, there existed a peculiar interregnum where emoji were only available on Japanese iPhones. The situation had to be carefully explained and caveated:

Eventually, an enterprising developer realized that emoji outside Japan was as easy as toggling a UI-less preference with a great name KeyboardEmojiEverywhere, hiding inside the innards of the iPhone:

Except, “easy” is in the eye of the beholder. This was still a few too many hoops to jump for an average iPhone user. So, developers figured out that there could be an app for that: the above preference incantation wrapped inside an application with an easy UI, and put in the burgeoning App Store.

The interesting part is that Apple initially fought some of these efforts, by rejecting a Freemoji app and likely a few others. (Not sure if this was about emoji specifically, or more principally about losing control.)

The developers had to get sneaky, and started hiding emoji enablers inside other apps. A $0.99 “RSS reader for a Chinese Macintosh news site” called FrostyPlace unlocked emoji by “simply pok[ing] around in it for a minute or so by tapping in and out of an article and playing with the two buttons at the bottom of its screen. That part is important, so be sure to do some genuine tapping.”

Then there was the free Spell Number (you can still see its old App Store page), where punching in a certain secret number would give you the same.

The author called it an “easter egg” and even wrote candidly at the end of instructions that “you can also delete Spell Number if you don’t want it, the setting will still be here.” (The number also had to change from 9876543.21 to 91929394.59 at some point, perhaps to evade… something?)

Eventually, Apple seemingly gave up – Ars Technica has a fun interview from 2009 from someone who renamed their app from Typing Genius to “Typing Genius – Get Emoji” and got away with it:

Ars: As the screenshot at the start of this post shows, you haven’t been shy about advertising the Emoji support over at App Store. Are you worried that adding Emoji to your application might have negative consequences? Are you worried about Apple pulling it from App Store?

Fung: I’m obviously taking a risk here by advertising Emoji directly on iTunes. That being said, I’m not the first. Worst case scenario, I’ll update the application with Emoji support removed. I’m hoping that Apple will turn a blind eye to this because I can’t see any harm done in allowing users to use Emoji. 

Not quite “I am ready to do some time for the good cause,” but close enough.

Yet, it still took until 2011 for emoji support to be universally available with iOS 5, and even then you had to enable the keyboard in settings.

I like this little story of a mysterious latent cool new thing hiding inside your device, a thing that you could unlock only if you followed some seemingly nefarious instructions that never fully made sense but that actually worked.

An interesting tidbit: At least early on in 2008, for emoji to work both the sender and the recipient had to follow the instructions. So the toggle wasn’t just about adding a keyboard, but also enabling the decoding and rendering. (And complicating things further, iPhone’s Japanese keyboard had emoticons, and that keyboard was widely available without any hacks. The difference between emoji and emoticons was not obvious to many people, leading to a lot of extra confusion.)

Lastly, a fun sidebar: I asked about all this an old internet buddy, Steven Throughton-Smith, whom I remembered back from my GUIdebook days, and who still routinely posts fun hacks and discoveries about Apple platforms on Mastodon. I thought “Steven might remember that story; he seems like the kind of person who’d at least know how to find an answer.” Turns out, my hunch was better than I thought: Steven was the enterprising developer who actually discovered how to give emoji to any iPhone, all the way back in 2008.

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