Apple needs to create a better solution for searching through the hundreds of emojis on your iPhone (AAPL)
Apple Emoji 2018
Apple Emoji 2018

Apple

  • There are 70 new emoji coming to iPhones in the coming weeks as part of the iOS 12.1 software update. 

  • The Unicode Consortium, the governing body for emoji, approves dozens of new symbols every year. 

  • While new emoji are great, iPhone users have no easy way to sift the 2,800-plus emoji on their phones. 

  • There should be no new emoji until there's an easy way to find the one you're looking for on your iPhone. 

In just a few weeks, 70 new emoji will arrive on your iPhone. 

The new emoji include everything from redheads — like those pictured above — to a bagel, a lacrosse stick, a lobster, and more.

This is a good thing, right?

Wrong. 

Hey, I'll be honest: I'm a huge fan of emoji, and I probably overuse them when texting with friends and family. Plus, as someone who is occasionally called a redhead, I'm thrilled that I and my ginger ilk will be better represented in emoji form. I'm even optimistic that having a bagel emoji will probably change my life.

But the fact of the matter is, we just can't handle this annual influx of new emojis anymore — at some point, enough is enough. It's become far too difficult to ever find the emoji you're looking for at the exact moment you need it. If Apple insists on including dozens of new emoji each year with its latest software update, it needs to add an emoji search function to the iPhone, or just stop adding new emoji altogether.

Don't believe me? OK, fine: say it's your friend's birthday, and you're hoping to send her a festive text message to help celebrate her special day. You'd like to include a balloon emoji. The only problem is, where the heck is the balloon emoji, anyway? Is it under the smiley faces? Hidden away in the tab with the little car and the little building? Suddenly, you're left scrolling through every single character before giving up in frustration. 

It's just too much.

(By the way, the balloon emoji is underneath the present emoji inside the tab that looks like a light bulb — obviously!)

2,823 emoji

For the past several years, we've gotten dozens upon dozens of new emoji annually. The Unicode Consortium — the governing body responsible for approving new emoji designs — typically approves the new characters for all platforms sometime around February, then they roll out on various devices and services over the course of the next several months.

Apple usually adds new emoji to iPhones via a software update sometime in October. This year, they will arrive as part of iOS 12.1, which will land sometime in the next few weeks.