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Might require OS X Lion and Safari.

Corresponding blog post here: http://www.panic.com/blog/2011/07/the-worlds-first-emoji-dom...

works on my iPad and iPhone with iOS 4.
iOS has had Emoji support for a while now, I remember my co-worker texting his wife with them.
> iOS has had Emoji support for a while now

Yep, iPhoneOS 2.2 (November 2008).

Although it's important to note it uses Softbank emoji.

After an app sets a certain key in NSUserDefaults.
Not anymore, you can add the keyboard in directly from the OS since iOS 4.
Can somebody post a screenshot for those of still in the emoji-less stone age?
What version of iOS are you running? I'm on 4.0.1, and all I see is "http://xn--ls8h.la/
You need to enable emoji. There are several free App store apps that will do it. One is Emoji Free! By Awesomest Inc.
You don't need an app. Just go to Settings > General > International > Keyboards and add the Emjoi keyboard.
That's the thing. I have emoji characters enabled, and can type and see them in text messages. It's odd I can't see them in Safari. Could it have something to do with my phone being jailbroken?
This is similar to a URL shortener my friends and I wrote a few years ago: http://get.emo.gd/. Emoji TLDs are even better.
No emoji here apparently (ubuntu 10.04), just a rotating rectangle. Is there an emoji ttf font pack anywhere someone can link to?

edit: emoji is not unicode standard and has no linux support apparently. oh well.

The article speaks of an "officially accepted Unicode 6.0 Emoji / ISO 10646 standard", but of course a standard has nothing to do with whether it is Linux supported!
The latest versions of Unicode have an official encoding for emoji, and (after having installed a suitable font) the resulting page renders just fine in Firefox Aurora on Ubuntu 11.04.

It doesn't render in the URL bar, of course, but that's Firefox's IDN whitelist at work.

A suitable font is Symbola: http://users.teilar.gr/~g1951d/

The Apple Emoji font uses a non-standard extension (png images in an 'sbix' table), so it can't be used outside of Lion / iOS at the moment.

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It's completely supported by Linux, but you need appropriate font coverage.
wow, thanks for the screenshots.. I didn't expect that pic. Expected a japanese character or something. Wow. We don't need that.
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The fact that this works reflects that fact Safari hasn't implemented the IDN standard fully, and neither has the .LA domain registry. Section 4.2.2 of RFC 5891 forbids the Emoji codepoints from being encoded in a valid IDN string.
Technically yes but if I'm reading it right that's only because in an outdated chart they hadn't been assigned yet. Unless there's a pattern of disallowing symbols but I'd have to question the motivation behind that.

Edit: Nevermind, the rules used to create the chart are designed to disallow symbols. It gives an explanation of the rule but not the reason it was set.

  These rules identify characters commonly used in mnemonics and often
  informally described as "language characters".  In general, only code
  points assigned to this category are suitable for use in IDN.
why?
Why indeed. It's just a publicity stunt, of course.
Their have been lots of emoji and other special char domains used already. you just haven't stumbled upon them yet.
£.com is another similar domain
😄 👍

🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

🍆 made me laugh, can't think why...
Is this there any utility to this at all?
From the source HTML: "<!-- The most important website ever coded by humankind. --> "
Doesn't work in Firefox. Note to web developers: CSS animations are supported now in Firefox; please use the -moz prefix as well as -webkit.