On 10 February 2015 at 14:31, Nicolas Mailhot nicolas.mailhot@laposte.net wrote:
Not to mention that to be actually useful, color support must exist on both sides of the conversation (and the Google solution is not the only one one the market).
Sure, this is Google's attempt at encoding colour into fonts, but the characters themselves are ordinary Unicode characters, so interoperability between IM participants doesn't seem to be a particular problem, to me. Emoji look different from phone to phone and from website to website, but people mostly seem to cope fine with that.
Probably too early to set it as defaut, at best as a dep of the first Fedora IM client that can make use of it. And then remove the dep when it's no longer experimental-ish
Let's not get hung up on the fact that the font I suggested happens to encode colour. I can receive emoji IMs today via Gnome Shell's notifications.
I guess the questions I'm asking are: are emoji now sufficiently common that we should include by default a font that can display them? If yes, what is the most suitable font for that?
Top posting: Just to update on this. We have recently added subpackage google-noto-color-emoji-fonts http://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/rpminfo?rpmID=5877202 [1] from google noto fonts project.
1. http://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/rpminfo?rpmID=5877202
On 11 February 2015 at 03:08, Peter Oliver < lists.fedoraproject.org@mavit.org.uk> wrote:
On 10 February 2015 at 14:31, Nicolas Mailhot nicolas.mailhot@laposte.net wrote:
Not to mention that to be actually useful, color support must exist on both sides of the conversation (and the Google solution is not the only one one the market).
Sure, this is Google's attempt at encoding colour into fonts, but the characters themselves are ordinary Unicode characters, so interoperability between IM participants doesn't seem to be a particular problem, to me. Emoji look different from phone to phone and from website to website, but people mostly seem to cope fine with that.
Probably too early to set it as defaut, at best as a dep of the first Fedora IM client that can make use of it. And then
remove
the dep when it's no longer experimental-ish
Let's not get hung up on the fact that the font I suggested happens to encode colour. I can receive emoji IMs today via Gnome Shell's notifications.
I guess the questions I'm asking are: are emoji now sufficiently common that we should include by default a font that can display them? If yes, what is the most suitable font for that?
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