Who Invented the Cell Phone
Posted: Wednesday, February 16, 2011
by Nick DAlleva
Specialty Answering Service
The idea of portable phones that can be used to make calls wherever you go was a revolutionary idea. Unfortunately, when the idea of a mobile phone was devised in the late 1940s, there were not a sufficient amount of radio spectrum frequencies to support the volume of data that would potentially be transmitted with the use of cellular phones. By the 1970s, the possibility of a properly functioning cellular phone became more realistic.
The first cell phone is not what many today would consider a mobile phone. It weighed approximately two pounds and was more than three times the size of today’s average phone. The first cellular phone was also very expensive, costing nearly $4,000. By 1990, already 12.6 million people around the world were partaking in this phenomenon. Less than 20 years later, the number of cell phone subscriptions multiplied 370 times to a continuously rising 4.6 billion accounts.
Since the early 1970s, the standard cellular phone has evolved greatly. In addition to being able to perform the standard calling function, modern mobile phones are equipped with thousands of applications for user convenience as well as having the capability to connect to the Internet. Today, cell phones can also function as MP3 players, GPS devices, and radios. Over the years, the average weight of a cell phone has also decreased to less than a pound.
Dr. Martin Cooper’s accomplishment is one that is often times under appreciated. Without Cooper’s contribution to technology, communication wouldn’t be nearly as simple as it has been made over the years. Computers and cars are also becoming compatible with features of cell phones. Each day, the capabilities of cell phones advance.
Specialty Answering Service provides industry specific answering solutions such as their limousine answering service and law firm answering service. We answer for each client 24 hours a day and follow their instructions thereby acting as their own office staff.
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