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Our Reliance on Cellphones Began 35 Years Ago This Week (qz.com)

With 95% of Americans owning a cellphone, it can feel like we've been calling, texting, and tweeting on the go forever. But the infrastructure supporting our cellphones has actually not been around that long. From a report: While we're now on 4G networks, it was only 35 years ago this week that Ameritech (now part of AT&T) launched 1G, or the first commercial cell phone network. That network, called the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS), went online on October 13, 1983, allowing people in the Chicago area to make and receive mobile calls for the first time. Ameritech president Bob Barnett, who made the first call, decided to make the historic moment count by ringing Alexander Graham Bell's grandson. A little more than a year later, UK's Vodafone hosted its first commercial call on New Year's Day. Israel's Pelephone followed suit in 1986, followed by Australia in 1987.

Cellphone technology had been around for quite a while before that. AMPS was in development for around 15 years, and engineers made the first mobile call on a prototype network a decade before the first commercial network call. It took that long to troubleshoot the various hardware, software, and radio frequency issues associated with setting up a fully functional commercial network.

3 of 123 comments (clear)

  1. Re:General affordability by Toth · · Score: 3, Informative

    I had a "cellphone" provided by my employer 30 ago. It was expensive and huge. "a dollar a holler" It was only provided for managers and some territory supervisors.
    Now all our managers and field employees have them. We have custom applications so all technicians can see their assigned calls and update them live.

  2. Re:General affordability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unlimited plans existed years before that, just not in the US.

  3. Re:Nordic Mobile Telephone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    ARP, 1971 in Finland, "0G"