Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

Now imagine if you're a user who's grown up in a generation that have always had emojis:

- They are part of our language and easily recognized from years of training

- Emojis are recognized immediate before reading a word and add to the speed and efficiency (as well as depth) of communication

- It becomes easier to understand sentiment before reading a word

- You're rules about where you should and shouldn't use emojis seem arbitrary

It's not as easy as it used to be to understand what all users want - your intuition about your preferences don't necessarily apply as broadly as they might once have.

As more young people build software products and become bigger audiences for other products, you're probably going to have to broaden your perspective on what experiences are common to all users.




Instead of arguing from first principles and the origins of Emojis, we're arguing - "Just get used to it". This is, my friend, how we regress as a society as no one challenges the status-quo.

I was hoping you'd provide some objective reasons that my comment was lacking, but you did none of those. I am open to hear and listen. We don't broaden the perspective for flat earthers, right? If we did, we would regress.

If there is any glimmer of hope - it would turn Emojis like symbols in Japanese Kanji script. They'd become logographic characters that are universally recognized across all languages. But, we're far from that. It needs to be formally included in the language, dictionary and schools.


My point is that _some_ users don't need to "just get used to it" at all since it's part of what they are already used to.

I'm not trying to convince you that you're wrong, just that you're not representative of all users. Your arguments are heavily biased by your age/experience. Young people matter too, right?


> Your arguments are heavily biased by your age/experience. Young people matter too, right?

I flagged your comment, this type of judgemental attitude has no place on HN.


Really not trying to dismiss your perspective. Just pointing out your bias. Your views aren't entirely objective and pointing that out isn't being judgemental. Sorry if it came across that way.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: