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A mobile phone (also known as a wireless phone or cell phone ) is a short-range, electronic device used for mobile voice or data communication over a network of specialised base stations known as cell sites. In addition to the standard voice function of a mobile phone, telephone, current mobile phones may support many additional services, and accessories, such as SMS for text messaging, email, packet switching for access to the Internet, gaming, bluetooth, infrared, camera with video recorder and MMS for sending and receiving photos and video. Most current mobile phones connect to a cellular network of base stations (cell sites), which is in turn interconnected to the public switched telephone network (PSTN) (the exception is satellite phones).

Overview

According to internal memos, American Telephone & Telegraph discussed developing a wireless phone in 1915, but were afraid deployment of the technology could undermine its monopoly on wired service in the U.S.

The first commercial mobile phone service was launched in Japan by NTT in 1978. By November 2007, the total number of mobile phone subscriptions in the world had reached 3.3 billion, or half of the human population (although some users have multiple subscriptions, or inactive subscriptions), which also makes the mobile phone the most widely spread technology and the most common electronic device in the world.

The first mobile phone to enable internet connectivity and wireless email, the Nokia Communicator, was released in 1996, creating a new category of multi-use devices called smartphones. In 1999 the first mobile internet service was launched by NTT DoCoMo in Japan under the i-Mode service. By 2007 over 798 million people around the world accessed the internet or equivalent mobile internet services such as WAP and i-Mode at least occasionally using a mobile phone rather than a personal computer.

Cellular systems

Mobile phones send and receive radio signals with any number of cell site base stations fitted with microwave antennas. These sites are usually mounted on a tower, pole or building, located throughout populated areas, then connected to a cabled communication network and switching system. The phones have a low-power transceiver that transmits voice and data to the nearest cell sites, normally not more than 8 to 13 km (approximately 5 to 8 miles) away.

When the mobile phone or data device is turned on, it registers with the mobile telephone exchange, or switch, with its unique identifiers, and can then be alerted by the mobile switch when there is an incoming telephone call. The handset constantly listens for the strongest signal being received from the surrounding base stations, and is able to switch seamlessly between sites. As the user moves around the network, the "handoffs" are performed to allow the device to switch sites without interrupting the call.

Cell sites have relatively low-power (often only one or two watts) radio transmitters which broadcast their presence and relay communications between the mobile handsets and the switch. The switch in turn connects the call to another subscriber of the same wireless service provider or to the public telephone network, which includes the networks of other wireless carriers. Many of these sites are camouflaged to blend with existing environments, particularly in scenic areas.

The dialogue between the handset and the cell site is a stream of digital data that includes digitised audio (except for the first generation analog networks). The technology that achieves this depends on the system which the mobile phone operator has adopted. The technologies are grouped by generation. The first-generation systems started in 1979 with Japan, are all analog and include AMPS and NMT. Second-generation systems, started in 1991 in Finland, are all digital and include GSM, CDMA and TDMA.

The nature of cellular technology renders many phones vulnerable to 'cloning': anytime a cell phone moves out of coverage (for example, in a road tunnel), when the signal is re-established, the phone sends out a 're-connect' signal to the nearest cell-tower, identifying itself and signalling that it is again ready to transmit. With the proper equipment, it's possible to intercept the re-connect signal and encode the data it contains into a 'blank' phone -- in all respects, the 'blank' is then an exact duplicate of the real phone and any calls made on the 'clone' will be charged to the original account.

Third-generation (3G) networks, which are still being deployed, began in Japan in 2001. They are all digital, and offer high-speed data access in addition to voice services and include W-CDMA (known also as UMTS), and CDMA2000 EV-DO. China will launch a third generation technology on the TD-SCDMA standard. Operators use a mix of predesignated frequency bands determined by the network requirements and local regulations.

In an effort to limit the potential harm from having a transmitter close to the user's body, the first fixed/mobile cellular phones that had a separate transmitter, vehicle-mounted antenna, and handset (known as car phones and bag phones ) were limited to a maximum 3 watts Effective Radiated Power. Modern handheld cellphones which must have the transmission antenna held inches from the user's skull are limited to a maximum transmission power of 0.6 watts ERP. Regardless of the potential biological effects, the reduced transmission range of modern handheld phones limits their usefulness in rural locations as compared to car/bag phones, and handhelds require that cell towers be spaced much closer together to compensate for their lack of transmission power.

Some handhelds include an optional auxiliary antenna port on the back of the phone, which allows it to be connected to a large external antenna and a 3 watt cellular booster. Alternately in fringe-reception areas, a cellular repeater may be used, which uses a long distance high-gain dish antenna or yagi antenna to communicate with a cell tower far outside of normal range, and a repeater to rebroadcast on a small short-range local antenna that allows any cellphone within a few meters to function properly.

Handsets

Nokia is currently the world's largest manufacturer of mobile phones, with a global device market share of approximately 40% in 2008. Other major mobile phone manufacturers (in order of market share) include Samsung (14%), Motorola (14%), Sony Ericsson (9%) and LG (7%). These manufacturers account for over 80% of all mobile phones sold and produce phones for sale in most countries.

Other manufacturers include Apple Inc., Audiovox (now UTStarcom), Benefon, BenQ-Siemens, CECT, High Tech Computer Corporation (HTC), Fujitsu, Kyocera, Mitsubishi Electric, NEC, Neonode, Panasonic (Matsushita Electric), Pantech Curitel, Philips, Research In Motion, Sagem, Sanyo, Sharp, Siemens, Sendo, Sierra Wireless, SK Teletech, Sonim Technologies, T&A Alcatel, Huawei, Trium and Toshiba. There are also specialist communication systems related to (but distinct from) mobile phones.

There are several categories of mobile phones, from basic phones to feature phones such as musicphones and cameraphones, to smartphones. The first smartphone was the Nokia 9000 Communicator in 1996 which incorporated PDA functionality to the basic mobile phone at the time. As miniaturisation and increased processing power of microchips has enabled ever more features to be added to phones, the concept of the smartphone has evolved, and what was a high-end smartphone five years ago, is a standard phone today. Several phone series have been introduced to address a given market segment, such as the RIM Blackberry focusing on enterprise/corporate customer email needs; the SonyEricsson Walkman series of musicphones and Cybershot series of cameraphones; the Nokia N-Series of multimedia phones; and the Apple iPhone which provides full-featured web access and multimedia capabilities.

Features

Mobile phones often have features beyond sending text messages and making voice calls, including Internet browsing, music (MP3) playback, memo recording, personal organiser functions, e-mail, instant messaging, built-in cameras and camcorders, ringtones, games, radio, Push-to-Talk (PTT), infrared and Bluetooth connectivity, call registers, ability to watch streaming video or download video for later viewing, video calling and serve as a wireless modem for a PC, and soon will also serve as a console of sorts to online games and other high quality games. The total value of mobile data services exceeds the value of paid services on the Internet, and was worth 31 billion dollars in 2006 (source Informa). The largest categories of mobile services are music, picture downloads, videogaming, adult entertainment, gambling, video/TV.

Nokia and the University of Cambridge are showing off a bendable cell phone called Morph .

Applications

The most commonly used data application on mobile phones is SMS text messaging, with 74% of all mobile phone users as active users (over 2.4 billion out of 3.3 billion total subscriber

An Indian startup thinks that the right software can make cheap phones a financial lifeline to hundreds of millions. In signing up for cellular service, many 'unbanked' Indians are leapfrogging elements of the traditional infrastructure to which they have little or no access: landline phones, the Internet, the power grid.


Problematic issues caused by AT&T’s cellular network are preventing the iPhone tethering plan from moving ahead.


MacBlogz has learned that problematic issues caused by AT&T’s cellular network, coupled with extreme caution being practiced by AT&T, is preventing an official iPhone tethering plan from progressing. The service, which has been in development under a microscope, has been running into fairly substantial issues with the stability of


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Giraffeton119 asks: "Could you tell me if there is any cell phone service that does not require such contract? I know that pre-paid phones don't require that, though."
HotMama replies: 'T-Moble!'
Molly6969 replies: 'All you can get without the contract is the prepaid or "GO' phones, everything else needs a contract'
melissa g replies: 'No, not all of them. I know with Nextel/Sprint you can choose to pay by the month, but you must pay a conciderable amount to start that type of service. Im sure other companys have the same deal.'
Proud Army Wife replies: 'I don't know if they have it in your area, but I don't think Cricket does. There's some downers about it, like if you travel outside of your home area you have to pay extra. But if you don't travel alot it's a good thing to get.'
Boss replies: 'I dont know any phone company that doesnt require contract because I dont think they would make as much money as they do right now --exept prepaid'
irascari replies: 'Most companies have 1yr or 2yr agreement because it cover the real price of the phn you are purchasing, if a regular price of a phone is $200 with a contract you can get a discount and only pay $100 or $50 depends on the contract you takeAny way, there are options to get a plan service without contract, but you have to pay the regular price of the phn.'
Walkin On Water Day After Day asks: "need to know so i don't get a bad deal plz and thank youplus i get a 10% discount on sprint plans."
mgcmnky3 replies: 'verizon'
~~~ replies: 'T-mobile'
Sweet Pea replies: 'I love Tmobile. i have never had any problems.'
*Mandy Love* replies: 'cingular... they have the best service and their plans are really cheap'
Ernesto G replies: 'try cingular'
Blade replies: 'Prepaid by sprint, $20 per every 60 days is hard to beat if you dont use it much.'
john d replies: 'don't know where you live but if cricket is around go with them...unlimited phone service with everything for like $50 a month...heres the website'
shakat000 replies: 'I'm not sure about cheapest.. But I have cingular and it works very well for me and i get service almost everwhere. And you can still hear great even if you only have one bar. But if you get one DO NOT get a cover for it if you have to screw it on. Totally screws up the phone.'
Tony K replies: 'currently i use t-mobile but there are so many to chose from- it depend on what your looking for- a phone for cheap minutes, a phone for prepaid, a phone for media- i happen to be very intelligent in the phone field. Email me if you want to tell me what kind of phone your looking for at what price!'
will s replies: 'Net 10'
Sylvia C replies: 'verizon are liars go to my homepage and read my most recent questions you can read my problem there so dont go with verizon unless you want to be given the run around and get ripped off up to like 176 more for a Phone so go with cingular or t-mobil also nextel is good :D SPRINT IS THE BEST!'
barbt4glitter replies: 'Compare several cell phones, and carriers for free at:With certain carriers, you can pay $0.00 for the phone, and then get cash back as well! Good Luck!'
ghettocowboy248 replies: 'this sprint deal kills ur 10% ud get. go to sprint.com/sero use this email to get in, and u get discounted plans. $30 500min, n/w @7pm, unlimited text/web/pic mail/vid mail'
golden duck replies: 'You can compare yourself.'
Vivianna asks: "Cingular used to be good, but since they switched to Att it has been horriblely expensive. A phone bill should never be more than an eletric bill. But our last bill was over $300.00, before we never paid more than $60.00."
yeah, it's me. replies: 'each person should get their own pay-as-you-go plan...seriously, i don't know how many phones you have, but my husband and i pay about $110 for two phones and our family share plan. we have insurance, texting, etc on our phones. if you get a bare-bones plan (no insurance or texting), you could probably get away with under $100. we have Verizon.'
Lazarus replies: 'We use an ATT family plan, no texting or insurance but all the other extras like call waiting , forwarding, v-mail, nationwide roaming and unlimited long nationwide distance etc.We have a block of time per month, about 700 anytime minutes with roll over minutes. We always have a surplus at the end of the month and seem to be losing roll over minutes faster than we can use them.Bottom line we spend $110 total (with taxes etc) for 5 phones. And the price doesn't go up and down because we don't tolerate the over charges. Don't ever base your pricing on their advertised plan price without taking into consideration the taxes and fees. It is always a significant factor more, at least 15%, usually as much as 20%,Make sure to use equipment wisely. No downloads or texting. No fancy hula hoop features like silly television over your phone. If the kids run up charges then they either have to work it off and pay the diference or lose their phone for a month.The first time you confiscate a phone is the hardest but they get the idea quick that it is NOT an entitlement and if they don't cooperate on responsible usage then there is always the option of closing the account.Have you talked to your ATT provider to get a better plan?They will sit with you on the phone and help tailor a plan to your needs if you call them and negotiate. You can research the current plan offerings online but sometimes the sales rep will know of an option that is not listed.BTW the family plan option also means that all calls between you and the other members do not accumlate minute charges. Also ATT does not charge minutes for any calls to other ATT phones.I believe all the networks offer this option now anyway but often you ONLY get what you ask for so make sure you ask your sales rep for the sky even if you have to just settle for the clouds. ;~)'
all50by30 asks: "I only have a cell phone but would like to have Internet service without using my cable company. I notice that some companies offer bundle packages, but it seems that you must have a land line. My current cell phone contract is about to expire, so I am currently looking at my different options."
-+-|oNe|-+- replies: 'Try Verizon Wireless Or Vonage.'
HappyChica replies: 'directv doesdirectv.com or 1-800-directv'
jon_8ball replies: 'cellone 50 bucks a month for the phone 19.99 unlimited internet'
rikato2002 replies: 'T-Mobile has voice and internet plans. You can use most devices as a wireless modem'

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