I wish emojitracker had an option to see cumulative stats spanning only the 
last (say) 7 days, rather than (I assume) all time. This would be more 
representative of current usage, fixing the problem of recent introductions. 
Also, comparing the recent and long-term stats would highlight shifting trends.


Peter

From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-boun...@unicode.org] On Behalf Of Leo Broukhis
Sent: Tuesday, February 9, 2016 2:47 PM
To: Mark Davis ☕️ <m...@macchiato.com>
Cc: unicode Unicode Discussion <unicode@unicode.org>
Subject: Re: Enclosing BANKNOTE emoji?

The emojiexpress.com<http://emojiexpress.com> site is useful to check which new 
emoji or combinations people actually use, but the stats are likely skewed by 
only measuring input from one platform.
Another way to look at the emojitracker.com<http://emojitracker.com> stats:
339M people in the Eurozone : 389K uses of Euro emoji
126M people in Japan : 354K uses of Yen emoji
140M people in UK + Turkey (likely users of the Pound emoji as a stand-in for 
Lira) : 515K uses of pound emoji
The total is 605M people : 1258K uses of non-dollar emoji
Assuming the same average frequency of use, 2933K uses of the dollar emoji 
would be produced by 1411M people, out of which us + canada + mexico + 
australia   (500M) + other countries using $ as (part of) the sign for their 
currency are way less than a half. This means that substantially more than 500M 
people are using the dollar emoji by default, instead of emoji of their 
national currencies. Assuming a lesser frequency of use will result in a 
greater estimate of the affected population.
Leo


On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 8:51 AM, Mark Davis ☕️ 
<m...@macchiato.com<mailto:m...@macchiato.com>> wrote:
Look at http://www.emojixpress.com/stats/. The stats are different, since they 
collect data from keyboards not twitter posts, but they have a nice button to 
view only the news emoji.

(The numbers on the new ones will be smaller, just because it takes time for 
systems to support them, and people to start using them. However, they bear out 
my predication that the most popular would be the eyes-rolling face).

Mark

On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 5:19 PM, Leo Broukhis 
<l...@mailcom.com<mailto:l...@mailcom.com>> wrote:
A caveat about using emojitracker.com<http://emojitracker.com> : it doesn't 
count newer emoji yet (e.g. U+1F37E bottle with popping cork is absent), thus, 
when they are added, their counts will be skewed.
Leo

On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 2:00 AM, Leo Broukhis 
<l...@mailcom.com<mailto:l...@mailcom.com>> wrote:
Thank you for the links, quite mesmerizing!

On emojitracker.com<http://emojitracker.com> (cumulative counts, but only on 
twitter, AFAICS), U+1F4B5 ($) had quite a respectable count of 2932622 (well 
above the middle of the page, around 70%ile), U+1F4B7 (pound) had 514536 
(around 30%ile), and U+1F4B4 and U+1F4B6 had around 353K and 388K resp. (around 
20%ile, but 10x more than the lowest counts, and about the same frequency as 
various individual clock faces).
It is quite evident that the dollar banknote emoji serves as a stand-in for at 
least half a dozen of various currencies.
[https://ssl.gstatic.com/ui/v1/icons/mail/images/cleardot.gif]

On Mon, Feb 8, 2016 at 10:25 PM, Mark Davis ☕️ 
<m...@macchiato.com<mailto:m...@macchiato.com>> wrote:
I would suggest that you first gather statistics and present statistics on how 
often the current combinations are used compared to other emoji, eg by 
consulting sources such as:

http://www.emojixpress.com/stats/
or
http://emojitracker.com/

Mark

On Mon, Feb 8, 2016 at 8:34 PM, Leo Broukhis 
<l...@mailcom.com<mailto:l...@mailcom.com>> wrote:
There are

💴 U+01F4B4 Banknote With Yen Sign
💵 U+01F4B5 Banknote With Dollar Sign
💶 U+01F4B6 Banknote With Euro Sign
💷 U+01F4B7 Banknote With Pound Sign

This is clearly an incomplete set. It makes sense to have a generic
"enclosing banknote" emoji character which, when combined with a
currency sign, would produce the corresponding banknote, to forestall
requests for individual emoji for banknotes with remaining currency
signs.

Leo





Reply via email to