How to spend a week without a cell phone

I have to admit, I play with my phone almost all the time.

 

Let's keep updating together and see what we can do without a phone around?

 

If there is no mobile phone, we can read books, not only can increase knowledge, but also immersed in the sea of knowledge, time will pass quickly, and the day will pass quickly.

 

Then we can also watch TV. Due to the emergence of mobile applications, TV is more and more home appliances, so if there is no mobile phone, watching TV to spend time is also a good choice.

 

How about yours? What do you want to do and look forward to?

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How to spend a week without a cell phone

The early ones I believe where named so for pinging between cell towers.

 

In the 80's I had one of the early telecom car phones and the number began with 007. 

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How to spend a week without a cell phone

When did we ever call them ' cell ' phones. ??

 

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How to spend a week without a cell phone

We didn’t, so far as I’m aware. Mobile phone, as used in the UK… unless I’ve missed the early genesis of these phones.

 

In Germany, it’s called ein Handy. In France, un téléphone portable. Language is weird and wonderful.

 

 

Before we had mobile phones, there was no constant and incessant connectivity. That had its good and bad points.

 

I would love the perfect balance between technology and nature. 

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How to spend a week without a cell phone


@domino-710 wrote:

When did we ever call them ' cell ' phones. ??

 


We don't in Australia but I think they do in the USA and I know they do in NZ

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How to spend a week without a cell phone


@ambercat16 wrote:

@domino-710 wrote:

When did we ever call them ' cell ' phones. ??

 


We don't in Australia but I think they do in the USA and I know they do in NZ


........I think we should all use the German "ein handy"

(said in Stephen Fry's best German accent)  🤣

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How to spend a week without a cell phone

Before the advent of a phone that you could carry around, cellular had a biological or geological meaning and meant “consisting of cells” or “something that contains cavities.” While that definition still stands, the word “cellular” added a new technological meaning with a concept brought forth by two Bell Lab engineers in 1947 named Douglas H. Ring and W. Rae Young. They proposed a network composed of hexagonal cells to allow mobile phones in cars to operate from one spot to another seamlessly. Their network layout resembled that of a biological cell, hence the term cellular, but the technology to implement their concept didn’t exist at the time.

It wasn’t until the late 1960s when another group of Bell Lab researchers expanded on the idea from Ring and Young and began to develop a way for the technology to work. Richard H. Frenkiel, Joel S. Engel, and Philip T. Porter did just that, and Porter was the first to propose that a multi-directional antenna, or cell tower, be used in the middle of each cell. This setup allowed the antennas to be multi-directional, and several channels could be used to handle calls while the tower covered a particular cell.

 

True mobile phones actually predate cellular phones. The first mobile phone system was launched by Bell System on June 17, 1946, in St. Louis, Missouri. It was a closed system consisting of phones in cars where the calls had to be handled by an operator, and a user had to press a button to talk and release it to listen. But early mobile phone systems had a few specific problems. There weren’t enough channels or frequencies to operate on, so very few people could use it at one time, there were few antennas in the operations area, and the phone required a powerful transmitter, making it very bulky and weighing around 80 pounds.

The cellular network became the complete opposite. It allowed the same frequency to be reused so that more people could use their mobile phones simultaneously, and it required only low power transmission. Also, cellular networks could switch from one cell to another cell without a loss in transmission, and this allowed for a much larger operational area. Another advancement was that mobile phones became duplex devices. This meant that people could talk on a call at the same time since there was a different frequency for talking and another for listening.

The first analog cellular system was introduced by the Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT) in Tokyo in 1979 for car phones. While the first analog cellular system in North America was the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS). It was introduced in 1983.

At some point, the convergence of the term cellular phone and mobile phone came to mean essentially the same thing without any difference between the two. But calling a phone cellular might not be that accurate. It may be more proper to say that a mobile phone is used on a cellular network or a network

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How to spend a week without a cell phone

Yes, here in the US we call them, "cell phones" or just, "phones".  I have a "flip phone" (not a smart phone, no internet and I NEVER text).  I keep the phone in my car on a charger and it's for emergencies or occasionally I use it to call the wife to ask if I can pick something up for her while I'm at the store.  

 

The wife has a smart phone but doesn't use the internet on it.  When it lets off a squawking noise, she uses it to answer texts from her mother or son and of course, makes phone calls on it.

 

We are both amazed by all of the people that we see in public or even driving their cars with their heads bent down staring at their phones, and often comment to each other about how we, "just don't get it" because it seems to us like they are all living in some fantasy world instead of the one that is right in front  of them.  Maybe we are just too old fashioned....

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