o_O —

Unicode 7.0 introduces 2,834 new characters, including 250 emoji

New release doesn't do much for diversity, but at least you can flip the bird.

We can leave dumb old "words" behind as soon as emoji evolve to express all forms of human feeling and emotion.
We can leave dumb old "words" behind as soon as emoji evolve to express all forms of human feeling and emotion.
Andrew Cunningham

The Unicode Consortium has just announced the release of version 7.0 of the Unicode Standard, the list of characters "which specifies the representation of text in all modern software products and standards." Unicode 7.0 adds 2,834 new characters to the existing list of 110,187 characters defined by Unicode 6.3, including new symbols for currency, new "lesser-used and historic scripts," and extended support "for written languages of North America, China, India, other Asian countries, and Africa."

Of course, the Internet being what it is, what people seem the most excited about are the 250 new emoji characters, listed here by Emojipedia. Notable additions include "hot pepper," "sleuth or spy," "man in business suit levitating," "reversed hand with middle finger extended," and "raised hand with part between middle and ring fingers" (aka the "live long and prosper" thing). The list of emoji also extends the character set's adorable fascination with outmoded technology thanks to icons like "soft shell floppy disk," "fax icon," and "old personal computer."

Mostly absent from that list of new emoji are the more racially diverse characters Apple said it was trying to introduce back in March. There are a few characters that suggest progress on that front ("sideways black left pointing index," "black up pointing backhand index," and so on, assuming that "index" is a reference to index fingers), but those additions don't introduce parity between black- and white-skinned icons, nor do they account for other skin tones. That's not necessarily surprising, since these standards take a long time to change—hopefully more characters are introduced in a future Unicode release.

Now that the new standard has been updated, software makers will need to add support for it in their products before users can take advantage of the new characters. Apple, Google, Microsoft, and many others are already in the Unicode Consortium responsible for defining new versions of the standard, so we hopefully won't have to wait long before we begin to see the new characters in OS X, iOS, Android, and Windows. If you're already using an older version of Unicode and would like to upgrade, the Unicode Consortium lists out the problems you may run into here.

Channel Ars Technica