iPhone: Enable Emoji (Emoticons) for £0.59, no hackery needed
I’ve always had a bit of a debate with myself over emoticons – even gone through a stage of completely hating them – but ever since I started working using AIM every day to communicate with colleagues, I’ve come to the conclusion they can actually be useful (for example, to give tone of voice to a comment that could be misinterpreted over text-only communication like Instant messaging.)
When the iPhone software update including ‘Emoji’ was announced, I was quite pleased – an extra facet to e-mail and SMS on the iPhone. However, I was soon disappointed to learn that this was a feature only enabled on Japanese handsets, as Emoji is so prevalent in modern Japanese phones.
However, thanks to UneasySilence’s article, I’ve enabled this on my iPhone thanks to a 59p application called Frostyplace. No hackery required!
Walkthrough
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1. Search the App store for ‘Frostyplace. The app is an RSS and comment browser for a Japanese media site |
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2. Install the app – it’s only £0.59 at time of writing. |
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3. Launch the app – tap the splash screen to continue. |
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4. The important part of this process: browse through entries, and particularly the comments (hit the speech bubble icon at the bottom) – you need to view an item with an Emoji, that in plain text look like |
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5. Open your ‘Settings’ on the iPhone and tap ‘General’. |
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6. Scroll down and tap ‘International’ |
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7. Choose ‘Keyboards’ |
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8. Scroll down and select ‘Japanese’ |
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9. Now that you’ve browsed entires in Frostyplace that contain Emoji, a new ‘Emoji On/Off’ option is available to you. Switch this on. |
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10. Now your keyboard in SMS and E-mail has a little globe icon in the bottom left. Tap this to bring up the Emoji menu. |
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11. The Emoji menu has several pages you can swipe through per category – the first category (with a clock icon) is you recently used Emoji. |
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12. Profit! The Emoji you send appear even on iPhones that don’t have it enabled. I’m yet to work out what other phones and devices support Emoji at present. |
Credit: I read UneasySilence’s short but sweet article but I wanted to do a walk-through. Seems like this is old news, but I certainly hadn’t heard about it!
No Comments Posted on 25. 01. 2009.













