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How Mobile Phones Work Behind the Scenes

adamengst writes "We seldom think about how our mobile phones actually work, but in this TidBITS article, Rich Mogull pulls back the covers and peels away the jargon to explain why text messages work when voice calls are dropped, why your battery lasts longer in some places than in others, why you're not allowed to use phones on airplanes, why you can be notified of a voicemail message when your phone never rang, and more."

6 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Short summary isn't always good by bendodge · · Score: 5, Informative

    And here we see illustrated why a reading the article isn't always a good thing. This summary is obviously designed to drive people to the site hosting this article (and lots of ads I'm sure), but by forcing people to read the article you've taken down your site and most of us will now leave this page. Nice.

    On a side note, what we do have in the way of a summary suggests that there's very little for us to learn here.
    1. Text messages work when voice calls are dropped for the same reason Morse can get through when SSB voice can't.
    2. Your battery lasts longer in some places than in others because the phone automatically adjusts its transmit strength based on the distance from the tower.
    3. You're not allowed to use phones on airplanes because of paranoid ignoramuses and the insightful people who realize how bad it could get when people in a flying bomb know what's going on (and how annoying cell phones are).
    4. You can be notified of a voicemail message when your phone never rang because the network was too busy to initiate the connection, your phone was on vibrate or it didn't have a connection at the moment.

    There. Now you can get on with your day.

    --
    The government can't save you.
    1. Re:Short summary isn't always good by bws111 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, at least your number 3 is wrong. Cell phones are not allowed on planes because a few hundred phones simultaneously hopping from tower to tower at several hundred MPH wreaks havoc on the phone system. It is an FCC rule, not an FAA rule.

  2. Re:I don't understand this about mobile networks . by Isvara · · Score: 5, Informative

    Disclaimer: this is for GSM -- other network types may be similar, though.

    When a handset is turned on, it sends an IMSI* Attach message to the cellular network. When you turn it off, instead of immediately powering down it sends an IMSI Detach message to let the network know that it is no longer available.

    If you lose signal, or just take the battery out, the network doesn't know that the handset is unavailable. It sends out a paging message to the last cell it was known to be in, and eventually to the whole network before giving up and returning an 'unavailable' message.

    * Or TMSI if it has already been assigned a temporary ID to use instead of its IMSI.

  3. Re:wrong audience, buddy by BLKMGK · · Score: 5, Informative

    Do not think that is true either. However a friend of mine who is a balloonist years ago told me what happened when he used a cell phone in flight - chaos! It would try and talk to many many towers at once and it was a mess. This article supports that theory and I think they have the reason right - multiple cell towers cannot easily handle being contacted by a single phone moving 500miles an hour. Now multiply that by the numbers of people that fly every day and you can see why the cell companies sure as heck don't want this occurring! I've still done it though :-) They explain how in-plane cell calls would work too if you read the article. http://mirrors.mednor.net/slashdot/10072008/TidBITS_Networking%20_Peering_Inside_a_Mobile_Phone_Network.htm

    --
    Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
  4. Re:Already slashdotted! by mc900ftjesus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Text (SMS) are sent over paging channels, not data channels. This is why they're still 160 characters. Yes, it's data but it's send in messaging protocols used for voice signaling. They can still get through if there are no voice channel available since they never need to setup a whole call.

    Telecom is old, don't assume things work the way they seem to as lots of legacy protocols are still in use.