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History of Cellular Phones
The basic concept of cellular phones began in 1947 when researchers looked
at crude mobile (car) phones and realized that by using small cells (range
of service area) with frequency reuse could increase the traffic capacity of
mobile phones substantially, however, the technology to do it was nonexistent.
Anything to do with broadcasting and sending a radio or television
message out over the airwaves comes under a Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) regulation that a cell phone is actually a type
of two-way radio. In 1947, AT&T proposed that the FCC allocate
a large number of radio spectrum frequencies so that wide-spread
mobile telephone service could become feasible and AT&T would
have a incentive to research the new technology. We can partially
blame the FCC for the gap between the concept of cellular service
and it's availability to the public. Because of the FCC decision
to limit the frequencies in 1947, only twenty three phone conversations
could occur simultaneously in the same service area - not a market
incentive for research.
The FCC reconsidered it's position in 1968, and stated "if
the technology to build a better mobile service works, we will
increase the frequencies allocation, freeing the airwaves for more
mobile phones." AT&T - Bell Labs proposed a cellular system
to the FCC of many small, low-powered broadcast towers, each covering
a 'cell' a few miles in radius, collectively covering a larger
area. Each tower would use only a few of the total frequencies
allocated to the system, and as cars moved across the area their
calls would be passed from tower to tower.
Individual Inventors & Mobile
Phone Patents |
Dr. Martin Cooper for Motorola.
US03906166
09/16/1975
Radio telephone system
Martin Cooper, Richard W. Dronsuth, ; Albert J. Mikulski, Charles N.
Lynk Jr., James J. Mikulski, John F. Mitchell, Roy A. Richardson, John
H. Sangster |
Related Class Patents
Related to cell phone patents and cordless phones, 64
patents listed. |
By 1977, AT&T Bell Labs constructed and operated a prototype cellular system.
A year later, public trials of the new system were started in Chicago, IL with
over 2000 trial customers. In 1979, the first commercial cellular telephone
system began operation in Tokyo. In 1981, Motorola and American Radio telephone
started a second U.S. cellular radio-telephone system test in the Washington/Baltimore
area. By 1982, the slow moving FCC finally authorized commercial cellular service
for the USA. A year later, the first American commercial for analog cellular
service or AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone Service) was offered in Chicago, IL
by Ameritech. Despite the incredible demand, it took cellular phone service
37 years to become commercially available in the United States.
Consumer demand quickly outstripped the system's 1982 standards,
by 1987, cellular telephone subscribers exceeded one million, and
the airways were crowded. Three ways of improving services existed:
- one - increase frequencies allocation
- two - split existing cells
- three - improve the technology
The FCC did not want to handout any more bandwidth and building/splitting
cells would have been expensive and add bulk to the network. To
stimulate the growth of new technology, the FCC declared in 1987
that cellular licensees may employ alternative cellular technologies
in the 800 MHz band. The cellular industry began to research new
transmission technology as an alternative.
For more information on Cellular Technology, read Cellular
Telephony by Brian Oblivion.
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