Genre : Internet, Education
File Name : WeBuzz Messenger
File Size : 241.11 KB
 Supported  Phones : (Nokia) E73 Mode,   E5, E72, C3, E63, E71, 6760 slide,  6790  Surge, E61i, E61, E62, 6282,   (Sony Ericsson) Aspen, (Samsung)  i637 Jack,  i400, i620, T559 Comeback,   S7220 Ultra b, i617 BlackJack    II, i640, C6620, i600, i607 BlackJack,  i320, P310, A827 Access,    (Motorola) Motocubo A45, ROKR E8, Q 9h, Q 11,  EM30, Karma QA1, EM35,    Accompli 008, Accompli 388, (LG) GW300, GW550,  KT610, CB630 Invision,    HB620T ... (Acer) beTouch  E130 (Alcatel)  OT-808,   OT-800 One Touch Tribe, One Touch Net, OT-800 One  Touch  CHROME,  OT-800  One Touch CARBON, OT-802 Wave, OT-806, (Amoi)  WMA8703,   WMA8701A,  (Asus) M530w, M310, (AT&T) SMT5700, (HP) iPAQ  Glisten,   (HTC) Snap,  S522, Ozone, (Huawei) G6600 Passport, U8800, U9130    Compass, U9150,  (i-mate) 810-F, Ultimate 8502, JAMA, JAMA 101, JAMA   201,  PDAL, JAQ3,  JAQ, (iNQ) Chat 3G, (Micromax) Q7, Q55 Bling, Q5 fb,   (MWg)  UBiQUiO  503g, UBiQUiO 501, (Palm) Treo 500v, (Panasonic)     VS7, MX6, (Sagem) my750x, my855c, (Sharp) GX25/GZ200, TM200,    (T-Mobile)  Vairy Text, Dash 3G, Dash, (Toshiba) G710, G810, (Vodafone)    546, 1240,  1231, (ZTE) X990, Xiang, E811
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The first unhappy face recorded on film can be seen in Ingmar Bergman's  1948 film "Hamnstad". Later on, in 1953 and 1958, the happy face was  used in promotional campaigns for motion pictures Lili and Gigi,  respectively.
First use of happy face in a campaign for the film Lili in 1953
The happy face was first introduced to popular culture in 1958 when  the WMCA radio station in New York ran a competition for the most  popular radio show at the time, 'Cousin Brucie'. Listeners who answered  their phone 'WMCA Good Guys!' were rewarded with a 'Good Guys!'  sweatshirt that incorporated a happy face into its design. Thousands of  these sweatshirts were given away during the late 1950s.
In 1963 Harvey Ball, an American commercial artist, was employed by  an advertising company to create a happy face to be used on buttons. His  rendition, with bright yellow background, dark oval eyes, and creases  at the sides of the mouth, was to become the most iconic version.[4[5
In 1967, Ball's design was used in an advertising campaign for  Seattle-based University Federal Savings & Loan. This was later used  when the man behind this campaign, David Stern, ran for Seattle Mayor  in 1993.[5
In 1972, Franklin Loufrani introduced the happy face to a European  audience, giving it the name "Smiley". On January 1 the 'take the time  to smiley' promotion was launched in the French newspaper 'France Soir'.  The Smiley logo was used to highlight all good news so people could  choose to read positive and uplifting articles.[6
The graphic was popularized in the early 1970s by Philadelphia  brothers Bernard and Murray Spain, who seized upon it in September 1970  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) which mutated into "have a nice day". Working with New York  button manufacturer NG Slater, some 50 million happy face badges were  produced by 1972.[7
In the 1970s, the happy face (and the accompanying 'have a nice day'  mantra) is also said to have become a zombifying hollow sentiment,  emblematic of Nixon-era America and the passing from the optimism of the  Summer of Love into the more cynical decade that followed. This motif  is evidenced in the era of "paranoid soul" such as "Smiling Faces  Sometimes" (released by The Temptations in April 1971, and by The  Undisputed Truth in July 1971), "I'll Take You There" (The Staples  Singers, 1972), "Don't Call Me Brother" (The O'Jays, 1973), "Back  Stabbers" (The O'Jays), and "You Caught Me Smilin'" (Sly and the Family  Stone, 1971).[7 The origins of this was parodied in a famous scene from  the movie Forrest Gump when Forrest is on his multiple jogs across  America, and wipes his face on a T shirt given him by a struggling  salesman, and on the shirt, as if transferred there by Forrest's face,  is the image of the happy face, whereupon the man gets his idea. The  happy face was also seen on a van in a scene from Mork and Mindy, the  van driven by men who kidnap them.
In the UK, the happy face has been associated with psychedelic  culture since Ubi Dwyer and the Windsor Free Festival in the 1970s and  the dance music culture that emerged during the second summer of love in  the late 1980s. The association was cemented when the band Bomb The  Bass used an extracted smiley from Watchmen on the centre of its Beat  Dis hit single.
[editUsage in Informatics
The smiley is the printable version of characters 1 and 2 of  (black-and-white versions of) codepage 437 (1981) of the first IBM PC  and all subsequent PC compatible computers. For modern computers, all  versions of Microsoft Windows after Windows 95[8 can use the smiley as  part of Windows Glyph List 4, although some computer fonts miss some  characters, and some characters cannot be reproduced by programs not  compatible with Unicode.[9 It also appears in Unicode's Basic  Multilingual Plane.[10
Unicode smiley characters :
☺ 0x263a White Smiling Face
☻ 0x263b Black Smiling Face
Unicode also contains the "sad" face:
☹ 0x2639 White Frowning Face
[editLicensing and legal issues
A satirical use of the smiley at the 2010 Rally to Restore Sanity.
French journalist Franklin Loufrani registered the iconic smiley  face image as a trademark in France in 1971, and he created "The Smiley  Licensing Corporation, Ltd." to sell, license, and advertise the smiley  face image in the United Kingdom and Europe. In 2001 the name of  Loufrani's company was changed to SmileyWorld, which has managed to  register the symbol in over 100 countries (not including the USA) for 25  classes of goods and services.[11
In 1999, Harvey Ball belatedly formed his own "World Smile  Corporation" and began licensing his particular rendering of the happy  face to fund charitable causes.[12 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."[13
In 1997, Franklin Loufrani and Smiley World attempted to acquire  trademark rights to the symbol (and even to the word "smiley" itself) in  the United States. This brought Loufrani into conflict with Wal-Mart,  which had begun prominently featuring a happy face in its "Rolling Back  Prices" campaign over a year earlier. Wal-Mart responded first by trying  to block Loufrani's application, then later by trying to register the  smiley face themselves; Loufrani in turn sued to stop Wal-Mart's  application, and in 2002 the issue went to court,[14 where it would  languish for seven years before a decision.
In any case, Wal-mart began phasing out the smiley face on its  vests[15 and its website[16 in 2006 anyway. Despite that, Wal-Mart sued  an online parodist for alleged "trademark infringement" after he used  the symbol (as well as various portmanteaus of "Wal-," such as  "Walocaust" and they lost that case in March 2008, when the judge  declared that the smiley face is not a "distinctive" mark, and therefore  cannot be trademarked by anyone—and thus, Wal-Mart has no claim to  it.[17
The Loufrani vs. Wal-Mart case was finally closed in March 2009,  when the judge dismissed Loufrani's claims to any rights on either the  generic smiley face symbol or the word "smiley," noting that both had  become "ubiquitous" in American culture long before Loufrani's initial  trademark application.[18
These two court decisions effectively ruled the smiley face (as well  as the words "smiley face") to be in the public domain, at least within  the jurisdiction of the United States. U.S. court decisions have no  effect in other countries though, and Loufrani's SmileyWorld continues  to claim (and enforce) trademark rights in much of the rest of the  world.
 




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