Cellular History – from a Russian Perspective

Russian Cellular PerspectiveFrom Pravda, a Russian newspaper, I have been lucky enough to stumble on their tome of cellular history and the impact of cellular in the country of Russia. Sometimes, reading of technology from another perspective can be very interesting, especially when I generally have some latest and greatest phone that hasn’t even entered the market yet.

First, cellular phones were used in cars: those were cumbersome devices weighing 30-40 kilos. In Russia, just four years ago mobile phones began to turn from bulky monsters into nice little devices.

Today, having a cell phone does not indicate that its owner has high incomes; what is more, mobile operators regularly cut their tariffs which makes mobile phones available for everyone. How did mobile phones appear at all?

Martin Cooper is considered the official “father” of a cell phone; being rather old today he is still a significant figure in the cell communications business.

In 1947, the Bell Laboratories research laboratory offered creation of a mobile phone to be used in cars. Those were devices weighing 30-40 kg; by the 1970s mobile phones considerably lost some of their weight to 15 kg and became smaller. There was no internal power source in such phones that is why automobile electricity was used for devices to function.

In 1954, Martin Cooper began his career as an engineer with Motorola, then universally known radio equipment producer. In several years, Cooper became the head of the department working on portable devices and created the first portable radio transmitter in 1967. Since that time he began working on a phone which people could take anywhere. Motorola decided to demonstrate that creation of cell networks was possible. April 3, 1973 engineers of the company mounted a base station on the top of a 50-storeyd building in New York. That was just a prototype able to serve some 30 clients and connect them to ground-based communications lines. Approximately at the same time the first mobile phone Dyna-Tac appeared. Today, the size of the first mobile phone seems to be shocking for us: 225Ñ…125Ñ…375mm, 1.15kg! There was no display at all and certainly no phone book which are traditional for modern cell phones. The phone battery maintained up to 30 minutes of the conversation regime and it took 10 hours to charge the battery. And still that was a revolution in the communications sphere.

Motorola did not open series production of Dyna-Tac; the company had developed five more generations of mobile phones before they became available for public in 1983.

Motorola Timeport P7389 is the world’s first WAP-phone; Motorola Timeport 7389i is the world’s first GPRS phone; Samsung SGH-A400 was the first mobile phone designed especially for women. The Internet Times (Swatch) technology was for the first time used in Ericsson T20. Benefon ESC is the world’s first GSM-phone having a GPS receiver.

However, it is not quite easy to say how old the mobile phone is. The first commercial cell network was put in operation ten years after the experiment conducted in New York.

March 6, 1983 Motorola began selling its DynaTAC 8000X in the US. The phone weighed 800 g but it was very long, 33 centimeter, to be put into a pocket. Even though the phone was very expensive – $3,995 – clients had to put themselves down on a waiting list. Having a mobile phone added much prestige to its owners, and the number of cell networks clients increased to 300,000 people in a year.

Nowadays, over 1.2 billion people hold mobile phones which are no longer exotic but everyday things. Engineers have worked a lot to make mobile phones so small that it is sometimes problematic to find a phone amidst keys and key holders in a pocket.

Appearance of mobile phones slowed down satellite phone development as satellite communications proved to be more expensive and less comfortable than cell communications.

The article actually had another sentence which I just had to take off. Sorry, but if you want to see the final sentence in the story, first sit down, then take a Tylenol and remember that the world is a beautiful place and of course what we do is safe! The feds say so! Then >click here.

Source: Pravda

Another article on Pravda provided insight regarding the countries near dependance on grey-market goods, and the “feds” are beefing up efforts to stop the goods from getting in the country. You see, they aren’t making any money off of them, nor is a “realtor” (broker??).

From: Pravda

About Lonny Paul

Nerd, web lover and always passionate, Lonny Paul is here to tell you the way it is - or at least how he sees it.
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