The Emoji Museum
A Journey Through Digital Expression
From pagers in 1999 to your pocket in 2025. Witness the evolution of how we communicate emotion through tiny pixelated art.
Xerox PARC: The Birthplace of Visual Computing
Before emoji, before emoticons even went digital, there was Xerox PARC(Palo Alto Research Center), the legendary lab where the future of computing was invented.
In 1970s and early 80s, Xerox PARC was the most important place in computing. They invented:
- ๐ฑ๏ธThe graphical user interface (GUI) - windows, icons, menus
- ๐จ๏ธThe laser printer - high-quality document printing
- ๐Ethernet networking - how computers talk to each other
- ๐WYSIWYG text editing - what you see is what you get
- ๐งModern email - electronic messaging as we know it
In 1981, Xerox PARC launched the Xerox Star 8010, the first commercial computer with a graphical user interface. The Star introduced icons, the desktop metaphor, drag-and-drop files, and the idea that computers could communicate through pictures, not just text.
This was the foundation. Every icon, every emoji, every visual element you see on a computer today traces back to the innovations at Xerox PARC.
๐จโ๐ป A Personal Connection
Charles Irby, who led the design of the Xerox Star's user interface, was my uncle. After his groundbreaking work at Xerox PARC creating the first commercial icons and visual computing interface, he went on to become the Founding Director of the Unicode Consortium, the organization that would eventually standardize emoji for the entire world.
From inventing computer icons in 1981 to standardizing emoji decades later, Uncle Charles's work spans the complete history of visual digital communication.
I'm Steven Irby, his nephew, and I built this emoji museum to honor that legacy, from the first icons at Xerox PARC to the 3,600+ emoji we use today.
๐บ Want to see the Xerox Star in action?
Watch Charles Irby's walkthrough of the Star Operating System โ(Yes, that's my uncle showing off the technology that started it all!)
The Very First Emoticons
On September 19, 1982, computer scientist Scott Fahlman proposed using :-) and :-( on a Carnegie Mellon University bulletin board to distinguish jokes from serious posts.
:-(
And so it began... simple ASCII art that would change digital communication forever.
ICQ - "Uh-Oh!"
The OG instant messenger! ICQ (I Seek You) invented modern online chat. Remember that iconic "Uh-Oh!" sound? This is where emoticons went digital - simple ASCII art that started it all.
Released by Mirabilis in 1996, ICQ pioneered instant messaging as we know it.
Emoticon data courtesy of Christoph Pรคper (Crissov)
Yahoo! Messenger
The international GIANT! While AIM dominated America, Yahoo Messenger ruled the rest of the world - especially Asia and South America. With 119+ emoticons, custom statuses, and that iconic "door opening" sound, Yahoo defined online chat for billions globally.
At its peak, Yahoo Messenger had over 248 million users worldwide - a true cultural phenomenon.
The ORIGINALS
Once upon a time, there were these devices called pagers. In 1999, Shigetaka Kurita created 176 emojis for NTT DoCoMo's i-mode service. These 12ร12 pixel icons started it all.
Remember the old charging symbol โก for cell phones? This is where that came from.
These original emojis are now in the Museum of Modern Art.
Huge thanks to Monica Dinculescu for preserving these!
๐ก Click/tap any emoji to copy it. Note: They'll look modern when pasted, but here they're displayed in the original 1999 style!
All 176 Original DoCoMo Emojis โจ
Displayed in their authentic 1999 style using the original font
AOL Instant Messenger (AIM)
"You've got mail!" and buddy icons. AIM pioneered Western emoticon culture with simple text-based expressions. The golden age of away messages, buddy lists, and door slamming sounds.
AIM dominated teen communication in the early 2000s with over 100 million users at its peak.
Emoticon data courtesy of Christoph Pรคper (Crissov)
MSN / Windows Live Messenger
The butterfly logo era! MSN Messenger brought emoticons to life with winks, nudges, and those annoying vibrating screens. Remember (6) for the devil emoji?
MSN had over 300 million users at its peak and defined a generation's online social life.
BlackBerry Messenger (BBM)
The exclusive club! BBM defined mobile messaging with its PIN system, read receipts (R & D), and these iconic yellow emoticons. If you had a BlackBerry, you LIVED on BBM.
BBM peaked with over 80 million active users - the ultimate status symbol of the BlackBerry era.
Skype Emoticons
Skype merged MSN's emoticon legacy with video calling. Hidden emoticons like (mooning) and (finger) became legendary. The era of animated emoticons reached its peak.
Click any emoticon to copy its code! These are the ACTUAL animated Skype GIFs.
The Modern Era (2015-Present)
Unicode standardization brought consistency. Apple, Google, Twitter, Facebook, and Samsung each created their own emoji designs. Today, we have over 3,600 emojis!
Explore All Modern Emojis โ