মঙ্গলবার, ২৩ ডিসেম্বর, ২০০৮

wireless phone


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This history of mobile phones chronicles the development of handheld radio telephone technology from two-way radios in vehicles to handheld cellular phones.
In the beginning, two-way radios (known as mobile rigs) were used in vehicles such as taxicabs, police cruisers, ambulances, and the like, but were not mobile phones because they were not normally connected to the telephone network. Users could not dial phone numbers from their mobile radios in their vehicles. A large community of mobile radio users, known as the mobileers, popularized the technology that would eventually give way to the mobile phone. Originally, mobile phones were permanently installed in vehicles, but later versions such as the so-called transportables or "bag phones" were equipped with a cigarette lighter plug so that they could also be carried, and thus could be used as either mobile or as portable two-way radios. During the early 1940s, Motorola developed a backpacked two-way radio, the Walkie-Talkie and later developed a large hand-held two-way radio for the US military. This battery powered "Handie-Talkie" (HT) was about the size of a man's forearm.
Contents[hide]
1 Early years
2 First generation
3 Second generation
4 Third generation
5 Patents
6 See also
7 Notes
8 References
9 External links
//

Early years
In December 1947, Douglas H. Ring and W. Rae Young, Bell Labs engineers, proposed hexagonal cells for mobile phones.[1] Philip T. Porter, also of Bell Labs, proposed that the cell towers be at the corners of the hexagons rather than the centers and have directional antennas that would transmit/receive in 3 directions (see picture at right) into 3 adjacent hexagon cells.[2] [3] The technology did not exist then and the frequencies had not yet been allocated. Cellular technology was undeveloped until the 1960s, when Richard H. Frenkiel and Joel S. Engel of Bell Labs developed the electronics.
In Europe, radio telephony was first used on the first-class passenger trains between Berlin and Hamburg in 1926. At the same time, radio telephony was introduced on passenger airplanes for air traffic security. Later radio telephony was introduced on a large scale in German tanks during the Second World War. After the war German police in the British zone of occupation first used disused tank telephony equipment to run the first radio patrol cars.[citation needed] In all of these cases the service was confined to specialists that were trained to use the equipment. In the early 1950s ships on the Rhine were among the first to use radio telephony with an untrained end customer as a user.
Recognizable mobile phones with direct dialing have existed at least since the 1950s. In the 1954 movie Sabrina, the businessman Linus Larrabee (played by Humphrey Bogart) makes a call from the phone in the back of his limousine.
The first fully automatic mobile phone system, called MTA (Mobile Telephone system A), was developed by Ericcson and commercially released in Sweden in 1956. This was the first system that didn't require any kind of manual control, but had the disadvantage of a phone weight of 40 kg (90 lb). MTB, an upgraded version with transistors, weighing 9 kg (20 lb), was introduced in 1965 and used DTMF signaling. It had 150 customers in the beginning and 600 when it shut down in 1983.
In 1967, each mobile phone had to stay within the cell area serviced by one base station throughout the phone call. This did not provide continuity of automatic telephone service to mobile phones moving through several cell areas. In 1970 Amos E. Joel, Jr., another Bell Labs engineer,[4] invented an automatic "call handoff" system to allow mobile phones to move through several cell areas during a single conversation without loss of conversation.
In December 1971, AT&T submitted a proposal for cellular service to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). After years of hearings, the FCC approved the proposal in 1982 for Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) and allocated frequencies in the 824-894 MHz band.[5] Analog AMPS was superseded by Digital AMPS in 1990.
One of the first truly successful public commercial mobile phone networks was the ARP network in Finland, launched in 1971. Posthumously, ARP is sometimes viewed as a zero generation (0G) cellular network, being slightly above previous proprietary and limited coverage networks.

Dr. Martin Cooper of Motorola, made the first US analogue mobile phone call on a larger prototype model in 1973.
On April 3, 1973, Motorola employee Dr. Martin Cooper placed a call to rival Joel Engel, head of research at AT&T's Bell Labs, while walking the streets of New York City talking on the first Motorola DynaTAC prototype in front of reporters. Motorola has a long history of making automotive radio, especially two-way radios for taxicabs and police cruisers.
In 1978, Bell Labs launched a trial of first commercial cellular network in Chicago using AMPS [1].

First generation
Main article: 1G
The first commercial launch of cellular telecoms was launched by NET in Tokyo Japan in 1979. In 1981 the NMT system was launched in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. The first handheld mobile phone in the US market was the Motorola_Dyna 8000X, which received approval in 1983. Mobile phones began to proliferate through the 1980s with the introduction of "cellular" phones based on cellular networks with multiple base stations located relatively close to each other, and protocols for the automated "handover" between two cells when a phone moved from one cell to the other. At this time analog transmission was in use in all systems. Mobile phones were somewhat larger than current ones, and at first, all were designed for permanent installation in vehicles (hence the term car phone). Soon, some of these bulky units were converted for use as "transportable" phones the size of a briefcase. Motorola introduced the first truly portable, hand held phone. These systems (NIT, AMPS, SACS, RT MI, C-Net, and Radio com 2000) later became known as first generation (1G) mobile phones.







Swedes contest Motorola claim to first mobile phone
Updated Ericsson had cell crown

By Adamson Rust
Friday, 4 April 2003, 16:59
SWEDISH PEOPLE are up in arms at suggestions that Motorola was the first to introduce a mobile phone, and say that it beat the US firm by miles, sorry kilometers.*
The first mobile phone system in Sweden (MTD) was introduced in 1973 and already had 2400 users by the end of the year.
Further, in 1981, the first fully auto mobile phone system was introduced and grew to a user base of 480,000 by the end of 1990 - a staggering five per cent of the population.
The systems were supplied by Ericsson and Televerket, known today as Telia.
And while we're on the subject of mobile/cellphones in the USA. We had Terry Shannon at our INQ party last week and he got into a right old rant about the cost of cellphones in the US. It seems folk there still have to pay for incoming calls, a relic of times past in Europe. For the nation that spawned Bell's invention, we think this is a disgrace.
Except... a Canadian reader says the first telephone system was in his country. Bell's home in Brantford, Ontario, had the first residential phone and the city had the first telephone exchange. "The telephone service did not originate in the US," he said.
And while we're on the subject of who was first with things, it appears the Wright Brothers were beaten to the punch to the first proper aeroplane by a poor fellow who flew one first in New Zealand.
And it's still disputed who invented the first TV, with John Logie Baird being the favourite of the Scots, but having his claim disputed by other nations.
And did Marconi really invent wi-fi all that time back?
* AND A GERMAN READER WRITES: ....the telephone's technology was invented by the German Philipp Reis in 1861. ...during 1936 to 1938 the German Konrad Zuse developed and built the first binary digital computer. ...the MP3-data encoding-algorithm was invented by Prof. Dieter Seitzer and Prof. Heinz Gerhäuser of the German Fraunhofer Institute. ..the car was invented by the Germans Carl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler. ...the "how-to-crack-an-atom's-core" was developed by the, eh, German Carl Hahn
** AND A SCOTTISH reader writes: "Scotsh wash invented by the Scotsh and thatsh the end of thish thread.
See Also Man talked to mobile brick 30 years ago


HISTORY OF MOBILE PHONE

1st generation systems were analogue and largely specific to each country
2nd generation systems were digital and in Europe one standard was agreed upon (GSM, Global System for Mobile), 1991 to present. This system is a big success
3rd generation system also digital and also to be available across Europe (UMTS, Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) and possibly globally from 2002



Topics of Discussion
UMTS definition, concepts and ideas
Market predictions for UMTS
Spectrum allocation for UMTS
UMTS air interface (UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access, UTRA)
Relationship with other standards
Operator and terminal considerations
Satellite



What is UMTS?
Universal Mobile Telecommunications Service (3rd generation system, digital)
Member of IMT-2000 family as defined by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
Global multimedia up to 2Mb/s
Replacement for Global System for Mobile (GSM, second generation system, digital)
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It's just one big machine

But it's activities is very high. We can use it maney way for our batterment.
The telephone network is one global device: probably the biggest and most complicated machine on the planet. Despite its ubiquity, it is a fairly recent invention.
The telephone initially developed using the technology designed for the telegraph (invented by Wheatstone and Morse in 1837). It started out as a manually-switched network (the first telephone exchange was able to handle a whole 21 lines, and was installed in 1878).
Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone in 1876, though there remains some dispute about whether the inventor's glory should really go to Elisha Grey, whose similar patent was only filed an hour or so later. There is some suggestion the crucial scribbled addendum 'variable resistance' in the margin of Bell's patent may have come from Grey's work.
In the next year, 1877, Western Union turned down an offer of the patent rights for the telephone for $100,000. A few years later, they had realised their mistake, and offered $25,000,000, but Bell refused to sell.
That same year, Thomas Edison demonstrated the phonograph. He had developed it as part of a telephone call transcription service, so that telephone messages could be delivered by telegraph: an early form of the emerging voice message to messaging services being offered today!
Calls were connected by operators. An American undertaker, Almon Strowger, discovered that the local telephone operators were unfairly connecting callers who asked for an undertaker to his rivals, so he decided to design an automatic telephone switchboard!
The first Strowger electro-mechanical automatic exchange went live in 1897, although in Britain it took another 70 years before all subscribers were connected to automatic exchanges.
Modern telephone exchanges are really more like specialist computers, and there are fewer and fewer of them around: the intelligent parts of the switching is done in fewer, larger units.
What used to house a telephone exchange now only holds a "concentrator" where telephone lines are connected to the network.
As with the internet, for telephones, location is increasingly unimportant

সোমবার, ২২ ডিসেম্বর, ২০০৮

World's first mobile phone


World's first mobile phone

These days we often speculate about what we did before we had a mobile phone. Well, before 6 March, 1983, the thought of being able to communicate anytime, anyplace, anywhere hadn't even begun to surface in most people's minds when Motorola launched the DynaTAC1 8000X.


For years Motorola had been at the forefront of portable communications. In 1930 they had produced the first commercially successful car radio, which they developed into the two-way radios which became standard for the allies during the Second World War. After the war they then developed pagers, car radiotelephones and radio transponders. As a result it was Motorola technology that relayed Neil Armstrong's famous words from the Moon in 1969. However, in 1968 the next breakthrough had already been made. Based on 'cells' that would enable the same radio frequencies to be reused simultaneously in other areas, they started to look into the possibility of mobile cellular phones.

Birth time of mobile


Over the next 15 years $100 million was invested in the research and development of cellular technology. The DynaTAC 8000X weighed 785g (28 ounces) and measured a colossal 300x44x89mm (13x1.75x3.5"). It only boasted one hour of talk time and eight hours of standby time, so that if you wanted it on 24 hours a day you would have to charge up three sets of batteries every day. However, it only had an LED display instead of an LCD, which was only just starting to be used in the digital watches of the time. There was a 150mm (6") aerial protruding from the top of it and you could also manage to save the princely total of 30 numbers in the memory of the phone.


The young rich kid who had everything, in 1983, could be seen with a mobile phone, that is if they were able to pay the $3995 for the privilege. One problem you might have encountered though was that there was very limited signal coverage to enable you to use it. So a lot of the time it was mainly used for posing2. The phone may have resembled a brick in size but by the end of 1984 there were 300,000 users worldwide. It may be a mere drop in the ocean compared to the 1.2 billion mobile phone users today but at that price it is an impressive number.


Moving On


Moving on


In the first of course mobiles have become cheaper, lighter and longer lasting.Majority people could not be able to understand the importance of mobile phone. They have gained more features including phone books, calendars, games, internet access, cameras and now even video. They have become an essential everyday item in most developed nations. Before they came along we all carried our emergency coins to call from a payphone. Now the mobile's rise has led to the demise of the familiar payphone on many of our street corners. The DynaTAC 8000X is a dinosaur in today's eyes but a landmark on the road to today's highly connected world.


It may be seen as a great step in personal identity or maybe the last breach of personal privacy but the day of the mobile phone has come since that first 'brick' of a 'phone in 1983. Where next is up to the imaginations of those who want to give us even greater access.

Cultural impact


Here are just some phone-related film and television events that show the impact of the mobile phone:




  • 1982 - A year before launch of the DynaTAX 800X, ET: The Extra Terrestrial has to use a normal landline to call home.



  • 1984 - The film 16 Candles is the first to feature the DynaTAC 8000X. Samantha Baker's love interest Jake Ryan has a cellular phone in his dad's Rolls Royce. Still a rich kid's toy.



  • 1987 - In the first Lethal Weapon film Sergeant Roger Murtagh uses one of the early, large portable phones from its shoulder mounted carry case to discuss with a psychologist that he suspects that Sargent Martin Riggs, his partner, is insane.



  • 1990 - In Beverley Hills 90210 there is a division between the rich and poor kids at Beverley Hills High based on who has their own mobile and who doesn't.



  • 1990 - Viv (played by Julia Roberts) in Pretty Woman is out shopping when she passes two guys in a car trying to hold on to their greater-than-fist-sized phones. And they think they are so cool, but not today.




শনিবার, ২০ ডিসেম্বর, ২০০৮

GSM MOBILE PHONE



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