July 8

Everyday Emojis

Even with threaded messages, my emoji-spreading habits aren’t gone. Many software orgs have adopted discussion and ticket systems that use markup and simple emoji, and I’ve learned very quickly to use them to my advantage.

I write about configuring servers to run software packages all day. And most of my team for the last four years have been remote and we do a lot of asynchronous communication in fits and spurts. And sometimes there are a lot of tricky little details involved in fixing the docs.

One of my Ukrainian colleagues started using colored text to indicate changes: green for gone, orange for add. It was such a great idea that I adapted it ight away. Then we got fancy and started using emoji and colored text blocks. Snowball a few years in and I’m juggling multiple brands across multiple projects, often with the same teams. A Jira ticket that shows off use of emoji for context.So I swiped an idea from Madcap Flare — contextual tagging. One brand of changes is marked with little red boxes, one blue, one green … but I hope that they don’t add any more brands as I’m running low on colors. Bonus: it’s the same colors I use in Madcap Flare for conditional text, so it’s easier for other writers to get what changes go for what brands and where. Big help on a large conversion product where we pulled in 400 more articles and got ready to sync up another few hundred externally.

It’s more than boxes when I’ve got the tools handy: I also use Jira’s status tags extensively. Those and other indicators help us all track and show what’s what when we are speed-reviewing content for multiple brands in quick order.

Use what you’ve got, you never know what you’ll pull together.

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April 16

Back in my day … we made do any way we could

The Internet used to scream. Before that, message boards used to scream. A guy I knew named Screech could connect at 300 baud with his vocal stylings.

Things were, in a word, primitive. Discussions, compared to today, were nearly up to the speed of Victorian England mail delivery if the message board owner had splurged for two modems and phonelines.

Our emojis were simple text characters or abbreviations, such as <EG>, Evil Grin. Eventually, “always on” internet became a thing, smart phones became a thing, and we could message as fast as we could think.

So I started using emojis for each train of thought, and still sometimes remember to use it today. You know, maybe we could use AI, the pretty little thief machine, to help? First, make emoji easier to tab to when texting, then train AI to start to string our thoughts together for us.

Just a thought.

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