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Telephone


 

:This article is about telephone technology. For the game of telephone, see Telephone (game). For the band, see Téléphone.

History

The very early history of the telephone is a confusing morass of claim and counterclaim, which was not clarified by the huge mass of lawsuits which hoped to resolve the patent claims of individuals. There was a lot of money involved, particularly in the Bell Telephone companies, and the aggressive defense of the Bell patents resulted in much confusion. Additionally, the earliest investigators preferred publication in the popular press and demonstrating to investors instead of scientific publication and demonstrating to fellow scientists.

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It is important to note that there is probably no one "inventor of the telephone." The modern telephone is the result of work done by many hands, all worthy of recognition of their addition to the field.

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See Timeline of the telephone for a chronological survey of the telephone's invention and development.

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See Invention of the telephone for a discussion of each of the critical technologies and their inventors.

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Early development

The following is a brief summery of the history of the invention of the telephone:

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Later history

The history of additional inventions and improvements of the electrical telephone includes the carbon microphone (later replaced by the electret microphone now used in almost all telephone transmitters), the manual switchboard, the rotary dial, the automatic telephone exchange, the computerized telephone switch, Touch Tone® dialing (DTMF), and the digitization of sound using different coding techniques including pulse code modulation or PCM (which is also used for .WAV files and compact discs).

Related Topics:
Microphone - Electret - Switchboard - Rotary dial - Automatic telephone exchange - Telephone switch - Dialing - DTMF - PCM - WAV

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Newer systems include IP telephony, ISDN, DSL, cell phone (mobile) systems, digital cell phone systems, cordless telephones, and the third generation cell phone systems that promise to allow high-speed packet data transfer.

Related Topics:
IP telephony - ISDN - DSL - Cell phone - Cordless - Third generation cell phone

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The industry divided into telephone equipment manufacturers and telephone network operators (telcos). Operating companies often hold a national monopoly. In the United States, the Bell System was vertically integrated. It fully or partially owned the telephone companies that provided service to about 80% of the telephones in the country and also owned Western Electric, which manufactured or purchased virtually all the equipment and supplies used by the local telephone companies. The Bell System divested itself of the local telephone companies in 1984 in order to settle an antitrust suit brought against it by the United States Department of Justice.

Related Topics:
Bell System - Western Electric - Antitrust - United States Department of Justice

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The first transatlantic telephone call was between New York City and London and occurred on January 7, 1927.

Related Topics:
New York City - London - January 7 - 1927

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Trivia

  • The modern handset came into existence when a Swedish lineman tied a microphone and earphone to a stick so he could keep a hand free.
  • The folding portable phone was an intentional copy of the fictional futuristic communicators (which in use actually more closely resembled walkie-talkies) used in the television show Star Trek.

Fixed Cordless telephones Cordless telephones, first invented by Teri Pall in 1965, consist of a base unit that connects to the land-line system and also communicates with remote handsets by low power radio. This permits use of the handset from any location within range of the base. Because of the power required to transmit to the handset, the base station is powered with an electronic power supply. Thus, cordless phones typically do not function during power outages. Initially, cordless phones used the 1.7 MHz range to communicate between base and handset. Because of quality and range problems, these units were soon superseded by systems that used frequency modulation in higher frequency ranges (49 MHz, 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.8 GHz). 2.4 GHz cordless phones can interfere with certain wireless LAN protocols (802.11b/g) due to the usage of the same frequencies. Due to crowding on the 2.4 GHz band, several "channels" are utilized in an attempt to guard against degradation in the quality of the voice signal. The range of modern cordless phones is normally on the order of a few hundred yards.