Nonograms are also known by many other names. If you know of any more synonyms, or the details about who uses them, please tell me.
Japanese
Invented by Tetsuya Nishio (date unknown). Published in/by Games Magazine.
“Oekaki” is Japanese for “drawing picture”.
A puzzle game for Nintendo's Gameboy
As of 1998-07-26, The Sunday Telegraph newspaper in the U.K. publishes a Griddler each week in its Review section, having changed the puzzle's name from “Nonogram”. The numbering continued from the old name, so the first Griddler was № 409, “It's all in the name”.
These appear in The Courier-Times of Roxboro, NC, and also in The Wake Weekly of Wake Forest, NC.
This name is used in some countries, including Russia.
Following the major tsunami of December 2004, a new name was chosen, it seems.
Another name
‘Logic’ is the Korean name for Nonograms, shortened from the name of a book Nemonemo Logic. ‘Nemo’ is Korean for ‘square’.
(Thanks to 김경래 (Kjung-rae Kim)!)
A very brief history:
In 1987, Non Ishida has the idea for a type of puzzle.
In 1990, her sole agent outside Japan, James Dalgety, invents the name Nonogram after ‘Non Ishida’ and ‘-gram’ meaning ‘to draw’. (In fact, ‘-gram’ means ‘to write’.)
The Sunday Telegraph newspaper in the U.K. published a Nonogram each week in its Review section, usually offering a £50 book token as a prize. On 1998-07-19, it presented its last puzzle (№ 408, “Down Under”) under the name “Nonogram”, offering a £250 prize in a competition to select a new name.
This appears to be the name of a quarterly Nonogram magazine in France.