Gene, a multi-expressional emoji, sets out on a journey to become a normal emoji like his parents. Along with his friends Hi-5 and Jailbreak, he travels through various digital apps and learns the importance of being himself.
In a future society where books are banned and burned by the government, a firefighter begins to question his role and decides to rebel against the oppressive regime.
Aadhav and Deeksha, a vibrant young couple are about to be separated as passion pulls them apart. Can love win them back together?
When Silver attempts her first livestream, Red is the ultimate Angry Bird while the adorable Hatchlings get into mischief.
In 'The Circle,' contestants live in an apartment building in London and communicate solely through a voice-activated social media platform. They create profiles, build alliances, and navigate the complexities of online interactions. Each week, the least popular contestant is eliminated, and the last person standing wins the prize money. However, not everyone is who they appear to be, as some contestants use fake profiles to gain an advantage.
In Barbie Video Game Hero, Barbie is a computer programmer who gets trapped in a virtual world. She must team up with her friends to fight a computer virus and save the game. Along the way, Barbie discovers her inner strength and empowers herself to overcome various challenges. With colorful visuals and exciting fight scenes, Barbie Video Game Hero is a fun-filled adventure for the whole family.
The Mojicons are emoticons that populate our emails and text messages. Sadly this zany bunch of condensed emoticons is clueless about how the Web works!
When a couple meet illegally for a booty call during lockdown, they end up getting more than they bargained for.
Richard Clay, art historian and expert on semiotics and iconoclasm and the interplay between new technology and shifts in meaning, compares and contrasts cultural symbols from across the centuries, unpicking iconic images, music, and other cultural outputs to explain where ‘stickiness’ comes from.
Every day, we send each other 7 billion emoji worldwide. Although we can no longer imagine our everyday communications without those colourful little icons, we don't know all that much about the Unicode Emoji Committee, the committee - consisting of representatives of large tech companies, such as Apple, Google, Facebook and Microsoft - in California, which decides what emoji are, or are not, included in our keyboards. Backlight got a foot in the door. What does the future of our communication look like?
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