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For other uses of "smiley" and "smiley face", see Smiley (disambiguation).
The smiley has gone through many incarnations over the years, but it consistently retains the same features.("Kolobok" type)
The smiley, smiley face, or happy face, is a stylized representation of a smiling human face, commonly represented as a yellow button with two dots representing eyes and a half circle representing the mouth. “Smiley” is also sometimes used as a generic term for any emoticon.
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The very earliest known examples of the graphic are attributed to Harvey Ball, who devised the face in 1963 for a Worcester, Massachusetts, USA-based insurance firm, State Mutual Life Assurance."Smiley Face: How an in-house campaign became a global icon", Christian Science Monitor, October 4, 2006 Ball never attempted to use, promote or trademark the image; it fell into the public domain in the United States before that could be accomplished.Who invented the smiley face? (from The Straight Dope). As a result, Ball never made any profit for the iconic image beyond his initial $45 fee.
David Stern of David Stern Inc., a Seattle-based advertising agency also claimed to have invented the smiley. Stern reportedly developed his version in 1967 as part of an ad campaign for Washington Mutual, but says he did not think to trademark it.Hunt, Judi. (November 15 1988). Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Article entitled "Ad Man Sad-Faced Over Misuse of Symbol".
The graphic was popularized in the early 1970s by a pair of brothers, Murray and Bernard Spain, who seized upon it in a campaign to sell novelty items. The two produced buttons as well as coffee mugs, t-shirts, bumper stickers and many other items emblazoned with the symbol and the phrase "Have a happy day" (devised by Gyula Bogar).
The smiley is largely associated in the UK with the acid house dance music culture that emerged in during the second summer of love in the late 1980s, often used as engraving famous logos on ecstasy tablets at the time.Ecstasy Tablet Gallery
Smiley has been a registered trademark since 1971 when French businessman Franklin Loufrani created "Smiley World" to sell and license the smiley face image in the United Kingdom and Europe. The Smiley name and logo is registered and used in over 100 countries for 25 classes of goods and services.
In 2006 Wal-Mart, which prominently featured a smiley in its "Rolling Back Prices" campaign, sought to trademark the smiley face in the United States, coming into legal conflict with Loufrani and SmileyWorld over the matter.Wal-Mart seeks smiley face rights. BBC News (8 May 2006). Retrieved on 2006-05-09.Loufrani v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Opposition No. 91152145] (Filed July 23, 2002) In 2006 Wal-mart began to phase out the smiley face on its vests Kabel, Mark (2006 October 22). "Wal-Mart phasing out smiley face vests". Associated Press. and its website as part of a "no smiling" campaign. Williamson, Richard (October 30 2006). "The last days of Wal-Mart’s smiley face". Adweek.
In 1999, Ball formed World Smile Corporation and began licensing the smiley face to fund his charitable causes. Profits are distributed to charities through the Harvey Ball World Smile Foundation, which also sponsors the annual World Smile Day Ball started in 1999 to encourage "acts of kindness".http://www.worldsmile.org World Smile website]
More than 1,200 smiley emoticons are registered with the Washington Library of Congress and protected by the Universal Copyright Convention.[citation needed]
The smiley has become an essential of Internet culture, with animated GIF and other image representations, as well as the ubiquitous text-based emoticon, " :- ) ". The smiley has been used for the printable version of characters 1 and 2 (one "black", the other "white") on the default font on the IBM PC and successor compatible machines, though modern fonts for graphical user interfaces often do not include those characters.
| Icon | Meaning | Icon | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| :-) | classic smile with nose | :\'-) | happy crying (generally associated with mockery) |
| :-( | classic sad with nose | |-O | yawn |
| :) | classic smile without nose | :-D | laughter |
| :( | classic sad without nose | %-( or :-S | confused |
| :-B | buck-tooth | B-) | Batman / smiley with glasses |
| :-# | with braces | :-@ | scream |
| >:3 | A lion, or an evil smile | :@ | what??? (seriously?) |
| :-| | indifferent | :-0 | surprised |
| >O | "Ouch" | :0] | smiling |
| ;0] | winking and smiling at same time | ;-) | winking smile with nose |
| ;0 | winking with open mouth | ;) | winking smile without nose |
| (:-D | gossip, blabbermouth | `:-) | one eyebrow raised |
| 8D | Awesome | :P | tongue sticking out (silly) |
| :-& | tongue tied | O:-) | I\'m an angel |
| c^:3 | Left Mouse | :-X | My lips are sealed, or "mum." |
| ~:> | chicken | :-K | Fangs sticking out. |
| x-( | Angry, bummed out | =0 | surprised |
| :-* | Kiss | XD | Laughter |
| ;:^)B> | Beard with buck teeth and nose: | (::[]::) | bandaid; offering help or support |
| O.O | Shocked | O.o or o.O | Shocked and skeptical |
| ._. | Sad, shy. | <3 | A heart, or \'I love you\'. |
| 8I | Not happy or sad. | :D | Big, potentially goofy smile. |
| >8V-()< | A duck | :-$ | \'Grillz\' or money mouth. (Being greedy for money) |
| =3 | Used to show happiness. 3 shows pouting of the lips in an amused way. (Alternative - :3) | <|:) | wearing a (tin-foil) hat |
| <>< | Ichthys (Christian symbol), Fish | >_< | Angry/frustrated face |
| <@:) | dunce with hat and curly hair | <_< or >_> | Sneer to left or Sneer to right |
| (-_-) | A bored face | Oo | Interested, the equivalent of raising an eyebrow |
| *¬* | Drooling | --\' | Zaltista |
Kitty Cat ^-^_| The two original text smileys, :-) to indicate a joke and :-( to mark things that are not a joke were invented on September 19, 1982 by Scott E. Fahlman, a research professor at Carnegie Mellon University\'s Department of Computer Science. His original post at the CMU CS general board, where he suggested the use of the smileys, was retrieved on September 10, 2002 by Jeff Baird from an October 1982 backup tape of the spice vax (cmu-750x) as proof to support the claim.Mike Jones (September 12, 2002), The First Smiley :-), research.Microsoft.com, retrieved May 31, 2007
More recently, small, in-line graphical images of smileys and other faces have become popular, especially on forums:
The reverse, or left-handed, smileys (-: have also gained popularity for being a way to avoid having text smileys converted to graphical representations in certain settings such as instant messaging programs.
In May 2002, Luke Helder, a midwestern pipe-bomber, tried to replicate a smiley face in his pattern of pipe bombs. His first 16 bombs formed circles, the first in Nebraska and the second on the border between Illinois and Iowa. Those bombs completed the eyes. Two other bombs in Texas and Colorado were apparently the beginnings of the smile. However, he was captured before being able to complete it.
A certain species of Hawaiian spider, Theridion grallator, a.k.a. the Happyface Spider, has some morphs which display an uncanny smiley-face pattern on its yellow body.
The smallest incarnation of the smiley was created by Paul Rothemund of the California Institute of Technology. He used strands of DNA in a method he calls DNA origami to construct a complex two-dimensional nanostructure in the shape of a smiley face.
The 230km (143 mile) wide Martian crater Galle (on the Argyre Planitia) very strongly resembles a smiley face.
A smiley face can be seen within a properly placed dental implant in a dental radiograph.[citation needed]
In the computer game, Unreal Tournament, there is a smiley face on the front of the flak cannon\'s arcing contact grenade (secondary fire). This is obviously very hard to sight because of the grenade\'s high velocity, but a time pausing cheat can be used to stop the grenade in mid-air enabling the player to observe the smiley face on its front.
A smiley face adorns the north side of the water tower in Hammond, Illinois.
USS Reeves (CG-24) placed smiley face covers on its AN/SPG-55 missile fire control radars when visiting China in 1986. The radar was designed to guide a Terrier missile so that it can shootdown an aircraft or missile.
Minesweeper implementation that uses a smiley to reflect the status of the current game.
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