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Cellular Phones:
Brief History of
Wireless Phones
In 1910 Lars Magnus Ericsson installed
a telephone in his car, although this was not a radio telephone. While
traveling across the country, he would stop at a place where telephone
lines were accessible and using a pair of long electric wires he could
connect to the national telephone network.[citation needed] In 1946
soviet engineers G. Shapiro and I. Zaharchenko successfully tested their
version of a radio mobile phone mounted inside a car. The device could
connect to local telephone network on a range up to 20 kilometers.
In December 1947, Douglas H. Ring and W. Rae Young, Bell Labs engineers,
proposed hexagonal cells for mobile phones in vehicles.[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.
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 Ericsson and commercially released
in Sweden in 1956. This was the first system that did 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 1957 young soviet radio engineer Leonid Kupriyanovich from Moscow
created the portable mobile phone, named after himself as LK-1 or
"radiophone".[4] This true mobile phone consisted of a relatively
small-sized handset equipped with an antenna and rotary dial, and
communicated with a base station. Kupriyanovich's "radiophone" had 3
kilogram of total weight, could operate up to 20 or 30 kilometers, and
had 20 or 30 hours of battery lifespan. LK-1 and its layout was depicted
in popular soviet magazines as "Nauka i zhizn", 8, 1957, p. 49, "Yuniy
technik", 7, 1957, p. 43-44. Engineer Kupriyanovich patented his mobile
phone in the same year 1957 (author's certificate (USSR Patent) #
115494, 1.11.1957). The base station of LK-1 ( called ATR, or Automated
Telephone Radiostation) could connect to local telephone network and
serve several customers.
In 1958, Kupriyanovich resized his "radiophone" to "pocket" version. The
weight of improved "light" handset was about 500 gram.
In 1958 the USSR also began to deploy the "Altay" national civil mobile
phone service specially for motorists. The newly-developed mobile
telephone system was based on Soviet MRT-1327 standard. The main
developers of the Altay system were Voronezh Science Research Institute
of Communications (VNIIS)and the State Specialized Project Institute (GSPI).
In 1963 this service started in Moscow, and in 1970 the Altay service
already was deployed in 30 cities of the USSR. The last upgraded
versions of the Altay system are still in use in some places of Russia
as a trunking system.
In 1966, Bulgaria presented the pocket mobile automatic phone RAT-0,5
combined with a base station RATZ-10 (RATC-10) on Interorgtechnika-66
international exhibition. One base station, connected to one telephone
wire line, could serve up to 6 customers.
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,[5] 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.[6] Analog AMPS
was superseded by Digital AMPS in 1990.
One of the first 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.
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