Tag Archives: emojis

Steam User Spends 5 Years Purchasing All Of Its Hot Dog Emojis

Image: Valve / Kotaku / NotionPic (Shutterstock)

20-year-old Brian Haugh has spent the past six years purchasing thousands of “:steam2016:” emoticons, which Valve created to promote the 2016 Steam Summer Sale and looks like a hot dog wearing little shoes. On Steam, you can purchase emoticons from other users in the Community Marketplace or create them by playing games that generate Steam collectibles. You can use them when chatting in Steam, to spruce up your profile description, or to create Super Mario art. Steam emoticons are typically $0.10 curios with limited practical use and aesthetic value, but they mean much more to Haugh.

“I will never stop looking for or at wieners,” he told me. “Wieners will be on my mind until the day I die.”

Some of Haugh’s dogs.
Screenshot: Brian Haugh

Haugh is on a mission to buy every :steam2016: hot dog emoticon available on the Community Marketplace, and has been doing so since the day he turned 16 in 2016. He routinely refers to them as “wieners” or “the wieners,” and as of June 30, he has 2,525 of them in his collection, which cost him over $250. He tracks these numbers in a fastidious spreadsheet, which contains all wiener transaction history and visualizes data in a graph named “Wieners Purchased Over Time.”

2018 was a good wiener year.
Screenshot: Brian Haugh

The wieners were a joke, at first. “I used to be a part of a small gaming group that met together to play Mount and Blade: Napoleonic Wars,” Haugh said. “During the summer of 2016, the Steam wiener emoji was released, and for whatever reason, I was stupid hyped over it. I kept spamming it, and our leader got fed up because other people were starting to join me. So he banned the use of it, stifling my rights to use the wiener emoji.”

In response, Haugh and his friends started drafting plans for a “wiener resistance,” which consisted of multiple people spamming :steam2016: until they got kicked from the server. He started buying the emoticon in bulk shortly after in celebration of the successful trolling, he says. Do you remember what it’s like to be 16?

The 2016 wiener resistance gained momentum on Steam.
Screenshot: Brian Haugh

But if you look beyond the teen boy shenanigans, Haugh’s attention to detail cannot be overstated. He’s dedicated to his craft, which happens to be collecting wieners. He’s so dedicated that he still performs routine checks on Steam’s wiener load even after feeling like he already made his “final purchase,” which bought up every available :steam2016: emoticon at that point in time (aside from one priced at $400).

“It has become a religion for me,” he said. “It’s always in the back of my mind.” And it has changed his understanding of real hot dogs forever—Haugh says that it “might sound strange, but occasionally I’ll see one, and this whole experience will flash into my mind and I’ll laugh.”

In addition to motivating schematic shifts, his mass wiener purchases might also be influencing the Steam market. They’re likely to be the sole determinants of :steam2016: emoticon prices, and because of the spreadsheet and Steam’s own data visualizers, Haugh has proof that his bulk purchases often lead to price spikes.

“No less than three days earlier, I had made a purchase of 66 wieners,” Haugh says about the July 1 price hike.
Screenshot: Brian Haugh

It checks out. “If I bought every single emoji worth $0.03 – $0.10 on a specific day, for example, the next day, the only [emoticons] being sold would be $0.11,” he said. “The average value would have increased, and other people would begin selling their own wieners at $0.11, which could be seen as the average trading prices for that day in the Steam market.”

“Steam’s marketplace is similar to that of a stock market,” he said. “Things are only able to be bought if someone else is selling,” which is why he let the $400 wiener live.

Our world seems to get darker and more filled with monkeypox every day, but at least one man’s loyalty to wieners stays good and strong.

“I don’t ever plan on stopping,” Haugh said. “There will always be some poor fool to list a wiener for a few cents on the market, and when he does, I’ll be there to buy it.”

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Messages by Google update now displays reactions from iPhones as emojis

Google’s Android messaging app is getting an interesting new update today. Messages by Google, which is the name the app goes by these days, can now show reactions from iPhones as emojis, “just like when you’re messaging with someone who’s using an Android device”, Google says. This will initially be available for devices set to English.

Next up, videos shared via Messages by Google can be sent as Google Photos links right inside the conversation. This means iPhone users will be able to watch a high quality version of the video through Google Photos, instead of the blurry mess that normally gets sent to them via MMS. In the near future, you’ll also be able to send photos in a similar fashion.

Google didn’t waste any time in condemning Apple for ignoring RCS, the standard which today “lets people with Android devices share beautiful, high-quality photos and videos with one another”. Google outright says it encourages “Apple to join the rest of the mobile industry and adopt RCS” so that it can “make messaging better and more secure, no matter what device you choose”.

Messages by Google has some other new features too, like Organized inbox which automatically sorts your messages into Personal and Business tabs. One-time password messages can be set so they get automatically deleted after 24 hours to reduce clutter. This feature is landing in the US after initially launching in India.

Gentle nudges remind you to reply to messages you may have missed or simply forgotten about (Gmail does this too). This is rolling out first to English users across the globe.

Finally, if you save someone’s birthday in your device’s contacts app, you’ll get a gentle reminder on that day, when you open Messages or jump into a conversation with them.

All of these updates are rolling out “over the coming weeks”.

Source

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2021’s new emojis perfectly describe 2020

Back in 2020,  the Unicode Consortium decided it was better to delay the release of Unicode 14.0, potentially meaning there wouldn’t be any new emojis in 2021. Thankfully, Emoji 13.1 was created as an interim release, bringing 217 new ones to our devices. We’re getting closer to the release of Unicode 14.0, which, thanks to Emoji 14.0, would bring a handful of new ones on our phones.

Although we still have to wait a couple of months before seeing them on our phones, the proposed list of new emojis in version 14 is now available, shedding some light on what to expect.

Most new ones focus on gender neutrality and diversity. As such, there should be a bunch of new handshake emoji combinations, offering a mix of various skin tones. Similarly, we should see a pregnant man and pregnant person emoji and similar variations for the crowned person ones.

In addition to these, the update will bring several new facial emojis, including a melting face, a saluting one, a dotted line face, another one with a diagonal mouth, and one holding back tears. The proposed Face with Open Eyes and Hand Over Mouth emoji is designed to make the 🤭 emoji consistent across platforms, which show either a serious or laughing face.

Besides these, Emoji 14.0 should also bring new ones, including biting lip, troll, beans, buoy, nest (with or without eggs), X-Ray, bubbles, ID card, pouring liquid, jar, playground slide, wheel, low battery, and more.

When it comes to availability, we shouldn’t see these emojis before at least October 2021. Indeed, this is a proposed list, which will then need to be approved by the Unicode Consortium before being implemented on devices, possibly starting with a Pixel phone between October and December 2021. In any case, it won’t be before mid-2022 that the majority of devices would have received the Unicode and Emoji 14.0 updates, allowing them to fully support the new emojis.

In the meantime, some of these emojis could be removed before the final approval in September. However, there’s a way for you to influence which ones will make it to the final version, using this link to cast your vote.

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