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The yellow-faced emojis commonly used today evolved from other emoticon sets and cannot be traced back to Kurita's work. [13] In 2016, the original set of 176 emojis was added to the collection of the Museum of Modern Art and was exhibited in the exhibition Inbox: The Original Emoji, by Shigetaka Kurita.
A highly influential early set of 176 cellular emoji was created by Shigetaka Kurita in 1999, [12] [13] and deployed on NTT DoCoMo's i-mode, a Mobile web platform. [14] They were intended to help facilitate electronic communication, and to serve as a distinguishing feature from other services. [6]
Yandex Translate (Russian: Яндекс Переводчик, romanized: Yandeks Perevodchik) is a web service provided by Yandex, intended for the translation of web pages into another language. The service uses a self-learning statistical machine translation , [ 3 ] developed by Yandex. [ 4 ]
Naoki Kurita (born 1971), Japanese sport shooter; Rosalind Kurita (fl. from 1996), American politician; Shigetaka Kurita (born 1972), Japanese interface designer; Taijiro Kurita (born 1975), Japanese footballer; Takeo Kurita (1889–1977), vice admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II; Toyomichi Kurita (born 1950), Japanese ...
An emoji (/ ɪ ˈ m oʊ dʒ iː / ih-MOH-jee; plural emoji or emojis; [1] Japanese: 絵文字, Japanese pronunciation:) is a pictogram, logogram, ideogram, or smiley embedded in text and used in electronic messages and web pages.
Yandex Metrica: Web analytics service [11] Yandex Metro Yandex Music: Music streaming service [12] Yandex News: News aggregator [13] Yandex Panoramas Yandex Pay Payment service Yandex Search: Search engine [14] Yandex Taxi: Taxi aggregation [15] Yandex Timetable Yandex Traffic Yandex Translate: Multilingual neural machine translation [16 ...
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Reverso has been active since 1998, with the aim of providing online translation and linguistic tools to corporate and mass markets. [3] [4] In 2013 it released Reverso Context, a bilingual dictionary tool based on big data and machine learning algorithms. [5] In 2016 Reverso acquired Fleex, a service for learning English via subtitled movies.