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New iConji Language For the Symbol-Minded Texter

billdar writes "As texting evolves into its own language, a Northern Colorado Business Review article covers an ambitious project to develop a new symbol-based language called iConji for mobile texting and online chatting. 'iConji is a set of user-created 32x32-pixel symbols that represent words or ideas, not dissimilar from ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics or American Sign Language.' There is an instructional video for the iPhone app and it is also integrated into Facebook." Behind this project is Kai Staats, formerly CEO of Terra Soft Solutions, the original developer of Yellow Dog Linux.

5 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. Re:them ancient egyptian hieroglyphics by CRCulver · · Score: 3, Informative

    If by "traditional Chinese characters" you mean the first writings made on oracle bones many thousands of years ago, then perhaps they can be called pictograms. However, the modern Chinese writing system is not pictographic or ideographic and Chinese characters, far from being some kind of abstract referents to things, is tightly bound to the structure of the Chinese language. See DeFrancis' classic work The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1984).

  2. Re:them ancient egyptian hieroglyphics by suffe · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually, they worked in three different ways. Pictograms, sounds and determinants.

    If you were in a "hurry", had a lack of space or artistic reasons, you could just draw the symbol for bird and be done with it.

    You could also use them to describe sounds (like a modern alphabet). This would combine a few symbols into a word that could be sounded-out.

    Lastly, you could use them to simply be more clear, to help _determine_ the meaning of a word. You'd spell out the word for bird and then draw a bird (and underline the bird to distinguish it from the rest).

    Interesting sideline to all of this is that you can write with hieroglyphs from both left to right and right to left. Doesn't really matter which one you pick. If you want to read it, just keep an eye out for the birds again. The direction of their mouths indicate which way to read the text.

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  3. Re:them ancient egyptian hieroglyphics by plut4rch · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you really want to be pedantic, it's not hieroglyphics but hieroglyphs. Also, the signs can be made to represent objects/ideas instead of sounds. If you want the hieroglyphic character to represent what it looks like, one just needs to add a small determinative stroke underneath. For example 'r' can be made to mean 'mouth' just be adding a small stroke underneath the mouth shaped sign.

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    An intriguing solution to a problem that should never have existed in the first place...
  4. Captain Blood called by Myoukochou · · Score: 3, Informative

    Captain Blood called, and he wants his UPCOM back. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Blood_(video_game) This is an utterly terrible idea, however, as you can type way, way faster on, say, an iPhone than you could ever select symbols from a list. I mean, a bunch of custom smilies is what this is, and a bunch of them are commercial. This is highly likely not to take off. (Also, where’s the Android app?)

  5. Re:3000BC called... by Speare · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just go back to 3000 BC...

    No we don't even need to go that far back... Here is a simpler idea... Chinese, Japanese anyone?

    The beginnings of Chinese characters are at least 8000 years ago, and they modernized over the millennia, so that is going that far back. Why do you think this project has the name "iConji" (pronounced the same as "i-kanji", the Japanese word that literally means "Chinese characters")?

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