GADGET GIZMO SPECIAL 15 Fascinating Cell Phone Related Facts You Probably Didn't Know
1)
The Name:
“Cellular
phones,” or more common today “cell phones,” get their name
from the fact that areas served by towers are divided up into
“cells.” The first use of the word “cellular” in this
fashion was in 1977. The first documented use of the word “cell
phone” was in 1984.
2) The First:
2) The First:
On
April 3, 1973, a Motorola employee, Martin Cooper, publicly
demonstrated the world’s first handheld mobile phone by placing a
call to Joel Engel, the head of research at AT&T’s Bell Labs
using the phone. Engel and his team were Cooper’s chief rival and
had also been attempting to make the world’s first handheld mobile
phone. As Cooper stated, “As I walked down the street while
talking on the phone, sophisticated New Yorkers gaped at the sight
of someone actually moving around while making a phone call.
Remember that in 1973, there weren’t cordless telephones, let
alone cellular phones. I made numerous calls, including one where I
crossed the street while talking to a New York radio reporter –
probably one of the more dangerous things I have ever done in my
life.”
3) The Phone:
3) The Phone:
This
first handheld cell phone weighed 2.4 pounds and was 9 x 5 x 1.75
inches in size. For reference, the iPhone 6 is 5.44 x 2.64 x 0.27
inches and weighs just 129 grams (0.28 pounds) This first handheld
cell phone also had only 20 minutes of battery life when talking,
but as Martin Cooper stated “that wasn’t really a big problem
because you couldn’t hold that phone up for that long.” Once the
phone battery was drained, it took approximately 10 hours to charge
back up fully.
4) The Fanboys:
4) The Fanboys:
Although
Apple’s iPhones generally receive the most hype and publicity,
world-wide approximately 88.3% of all mobile phones in use today are
not iPhones. Further, Android is king by far in terms of OS used on
smart phones with a whopping 84.7% market share according to
Business Insider (August 15, 2014).
5) The Fear:
The fear of having no cell phone signal or otherwise being unable to make or receive cell phone calls is called Nomophobia.
6) The Phalanges:
The fingers you use to interact with your cell phone don’t actually contain any muscles, at least not ones used to move fingers. (Technically fingers contain many tiny arrector pili muscles, but these have nothing to do with movement of fingers, but rather are attached to hair follicles and can make the hairs on your fingers stand out straight.)
So if there are no muscles in our fingers to move them, how do they move? Short answer: magic… err, tendons and ligaments. Longer answer: Each finger consists of three bones (phalanges). In our bodies, tendons generally connect muscle to bone, and ligaments generally connect bone to bone. The tendons that control the bones in our fingers are attached to 17 muscles in the palm of your hand and 18 in your forearm, with none of the muscles extending into the fingers.
7) The Texts:
So if there are no muscles in our fingers to move them, how do they move? Short answer: magic… err, tendons and ligaments. Longer answer: Each finger consists of three bones (phalanges). In our bodies, tendons generally connect muscle to bone, and ligaments generally connect bone to bone. The tendons that control the bones in our fingers are attached to 17 muscles in the palm of your hand and 18 in your forearm, with none of the muscles extending into the fingers.
7) The Texts:
Over 9 trillion text messages were sent in 2013. That equates to about 1,200 text messages per person on the planet per year. However, text messaging numbers are starting to decline as people more and more use apps like WhatsApp, iMessage, etc. to communicate. Further, the number of text messages still pales in comparison to the number of emails sent per year, which is estimated at over 100 trillion.
8) The Fastest:
8) The Fastest:
According to the Guinness World Records, the current fastest texter in the world is Sonja Kristiansen of Norway who was able to text the following message in 37.28 seconds (fastest to date): “The razor-toothed piranhas of the general Serrasalmus and Pygocentrus are the most ferocious freshwater fish in the world. In reality, they seldom attack a human.” If you can beat that time, you might want to give Guinness World Records a call.
9) The Antiques:
9) The Antiques:
A type of car based non-handheld mobile phone has been around since the 1940s, but was more a novelty item than practical and generally needed significant enough power that you could only use one with the engine running.
10)
They Myth:
Contrary
to popular belief, cellphones used in a normal way do not create
enough electromagnetic interference to cause problems with hospital
equipment. It was once thought that they created false alarms,
incorrect equipment readings, and subsequent errors in treatment.
This myth was based on a highly publicized study done in 1993 that
offered no actual direct evidence that this was happening, just
several doctor’s suspicions that it was happening. An actual
scientific study by the Mayo Clinic in 2005 busted this myth, as did
another done in 2007. Not only this, but, funny enough, according to
a survey of anesthesiologists, having a cell phone to use while
treating patients resulted in about 22% fewer medical errors than
when they had to delay communicating with someone about something
pertaining to their patient.
11) The Most:
11) The Most:
The
top 5 countries in the world with the most currently active cell
phones are: China: 1.2 billion phones; India: 904 million phones;
U.S. 327 million phones; Brazil: 276 million phones; and Russia: 256
million phones. That said, the highest number of active phones per
person for a country is Montenegro at 192.5% or nearly two phones
per person. The runner up on that list is Hong Kong at 187.9%.
12)
The Problem:
Cell
and VoIP phones have introduced some new problems to the old 9-1-1
and Enhanced 9-1-1 system, namely trying to figure out where the
person in question is making the phone call from. For cell phones,
the FCC requires very strict location parameters either via GPS
tracking of the cell phone or by cell network location. In the
former case, it needs to be accurate to within 150 meters for a
minimum of 90% of the 9-1-1 calls and within 50 meters for a minimum
of 67% of the calls. In the latter network location case, it needs
to be accurate to within 300 meters for 90% of the calls and 100
meters for 67% of the calls. It is expected that over time the FCC
will continue to require these systems to be more and more
accurate.
A shift to cell phone usage has introduced the possibility of texting 9-1-1 to receive help. While the system is still being rolled out, many carriers such as AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon now support this and it is expected that all will support it by December 31, 2014. To get around the problem of the individual sending the text knowing whether the texting 9-1-1 system is available in their area, if you send one where this isn’t available yet, you should receive an automatic response text message telling you it’s not available.
13) The Gap:
A shift to cell phone usage has introduced the possibility of texting 9-1-1 to receive help. While the system is still being rolled out, many carriers such as AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon now support this and it is expected that all will support it by December 31, 2014. To get around the problem of the individual sending the text knowing whether the texting 9-1-1 system is available in their area, if you send one where this isn’t available yet, you should receive an automatic response text message telling you it’s not available.
13) The Gap:
It
was a full 10 years after public demonstration of the first handheld
cell phone in 1973 before the first commercial handheld cell phone,
the DynaTAC 8000x (“Dynamic Adaptive Total Area Coverage”), hit
the market on March 6, 1983. This phone weighed “only” 1.1
pounds, had 30 minutes of battery life (8 hours of standby), and was
initially priced at $3,995, which is about $9300 today. It took
another seven years to reach one million cell phone subscribers,
hitting that figure in 1990. Today, billions of phones are currently
in use and there are far more handheld mobile phone subscribers than
there are wired phone subscribers.
14)
The Law:
Martin
Cooper also has a “law” named after him. Cooper’s Law states
that our technology is advancing at such a rate that the number of
different wireless communications possible in one location, at the
same time will double every 30 months. This “law” has held true
since the first transmission by Guglielmo Marconi in 1895. To
illustrate, due to the method of transmitting this first signal,
with a spark gap transmitter, it took up most of the radio spectrum
to send this signal. So the technology at that time more or less
just allowed for one signal to be sent at any given time at a
certain location. Further, given the number of square miles
Marconi’s first transmitter blanketed, only about 50 separate
signals could have been sent at one time on the entire planet
without interfering with one another. Since then, every 30 months,
the number of signals that can be transmitted at one time in one
location has approximately doubled.
15)
The Droids You’re Looking For:
The
word “droid” is a registered trademark of Lucasfilm Ltd. Shortly
before Verizon launched their “DROID” line of mobile devices,
Lucasfilm Ltd. swept in and filed a trademark on October 9, 2009 for
the term “Droid”. Specifically claiming the term for: “Wireless
communications devices, including, mobile phones, cell phones, hand
held devices and personal digital assistants, accessories and parts
therefor, and related computer software and wireless
telecommunications programs; mobile digital electronic devices for
the sending and receiving of telephone calls, electronic mail, and
other digital data, for use as a digital format audio player, and
for use as a handheld computer, electronic organizer, electronic
notepad, and digital camera; downloadable ring tones and screen
savers; cameras, pagers and calling cards.” As a result of this,
Verizon pays Lucasfilm Ltd. an undisclosed sum for the rights to use
this word as a brand name.
I
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