Making The Digital Space A World With Emotions, Courtesy Of Samsung Emoji Suites; Find Out Oxford Dictionaries' Word Of The Year 2015

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The Samsung emoji suites make communication in the digital space filled with emotions.

According to emojipedia, Samsung's devices are using a separate set of emojis which are different from Google's flat-color images.

Technology allows people to communicate in the digital world, where communication varies from the usual face-to-face talking. It is likewise difficult to express emotions in the digital space so we need the help of Samsung emoji suites.

Emojis are the colorful icons people can insert into text messages to add more personality and inject emotion. They are understandable and surpass all barriers, languages, nationalities and culture. They ran on most smartphones and platforms, reported Samsung Newsroom.

Samsung designed emojis for its own mobile devices in 2010, and recently putting more emphasis to reflect the evolving communication habits of the consumers in its devices.

In August, it launched the Galaxy S6 Edge+ which introduced People Edge, a function exclusive for the device which allows users to send emails, messages and emojis. The company's new wearable, the Galaxy Gear S2 also gives users an option to use emojis in their messages.

Whatever mood the user is in, or whatever activity he is doing or product he wants to talk about, Samsung likely has an emoji for that.

The ideograms are more than just cute characters and become the world's most widely used forms of communication. They transform the way users communicate in the digital world as they express more body language and facial expressions.

Erin Jung of Samsung's UX Design team, the group that works to expand Samsung emoji suites noted that they focus on emojis to add fun to Samsung devices.

"One way we do that is by increasing the volume of the details. The smiling face, for example, may have larger eyes while the anxious-looking face might have a larger bead of sweat," Jung said.

Named Word of the Year 2015 by the Oxford Dictionaries is not a word, but a pictograph - an emoji "Face with Tears of Joy," which is this year's most widely used.

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