I love my mobile phone like many people but you often forget how long it’s taken to get to the technology we know today. I’ve written the following article to inform you of the history of the telephone. I hope you find the following article informative.
The history of the telephone starts in 1870 when two inventors called Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray planned an invention which would transmit speech electrically which is now known as the Telephone. Surprisingly these two men worked separately in there invention. Like many people they both rushed to the patent office to secure their design, unfortunately Alexander Graham Bell was the first one to the office. Obviously the two men battled it out in a legal court case which has made history but Bell won the case.
What we know of as a telephone originally started its life as a telegraph and evolved into what we know today as a telephone.
The telegraph was a electrical system which was wire based. This system had been used for roughly thirty years before Bell invented the telephone. The telegraph was a communication devise but communicated in a morse code of dots and dashes which became very confusing.
By October of 1874 Alexander Graham Bell’s work had increased so much that Telegraph Company where happy to finance his research so that the telephone could be used. This company believed they were financing a multiply telegraph which could receive multiply morse codes through at once but Bell had enlisted a gentleman called Thomas Watson who was a electrician who could help Alexander Graham Bell in developing the device called the telephone which could transmit speech electrically via wires. In 1875 a Joseph Henry decided to help with financing and offered encouraging support for the telephone.
Cordless Phones – Popular Choices for Office and Home
Among the fields that made rapid advancements, telecommunication is of the most remarkable ones. Telephones went through several changes in forms and styles and different high end technologies have been incorporated in these devices since inventions of these gadgets. There was no alternative of to corded phones at the beginning. In homes and offices these phones were greatly in use. But then came the cordless phones and soon those captured the market replacing use of corded phones in most of the offices.
Mobile phones are latest editions in this voyage of telephones and these gadgets are high in demands recently among phone users. You will find massive uses of these phones among phone users. There are several high end gadgets that include features like large internal memory, data transferring facility, speakerphone, video cameras, cameras and high tech features like TouchWiz 3.0 UI, multi-touch input method, accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate, touch-sensitive controls, proximity sensor for auto turn-off and swype text input and others in the phone. Moreover with Wi-Fi, 2G and 3G network and features like GPRS and EDGE you can surf net comfortably. Users are listening to music, playing games, making documents and editing documents, shooting videos, watching videos, capturing photos, sending and receiving SMS, MMS, and email with these gadgets recently. For once it was looking like that the massive popularity of these gadgets will end the requirements of home phones or office land phones. But that is never the case as even now when you visit several offices you can get to see massive use of wireless land phones. These phones can keep the employees free and they can move around with the receiver and carry on with other activities while talking over phone. And if they use headphones, they can even keep their hands free and thus they can continue with some of computer works or writing works or any other works.
Although cordless phones can provide a range of 100 meters, yet with advanced form of these gadgets like in case of DECT phones you can get a range of 300 meters and so the whole office can easily be covered with these networks. There are several websites that deal with these phones and you can easily compare among price ranges and other details of these things online. In this way you can find some of appropriate gadgets for you with these items.
Telephones and Cell Phones
Cell phones are becoming more useful and more of an everyday part of life. They can do things that use to be reserved for computers, making a lot of data a lot more portable. Some double as small computers, and others can double as a music player. Though landline phones are not able to do those things, most people keep those numbers. When you have to give a number to someone you do not know, it is easier to give them a landline number. Because phones are so important, you should learn something about phone numbers.
Landline numbers are the same as they have always been. These are made up of an area code, prefix, and then a four digit set of numbers that denote your phone only. The area code helps route the call to your state, but more likely, a small area of your state. The prefix takes it to your town or part of city, and then the last four bring it to your home.
If you have to know more about such a number, you can see what you can learn about the area code and the prefix. You can also go to the online white pages to look up any residential phone number that is still listed. When a number is coming in that you do not know, you can use their reverse phone search to see if you can find a name to go along with it. This is free and fast.
Cell numbers are set up the very same way that landline numbers are set up. This means you can learn a bit from them by looking at the area code and prefix too. However, there are no directories through which you can search for someone’s mobile number by entering their name. This was once a consideration, but the idea was set aside due to privacy reasons.
You can, however, find people by phone number, even when the number is mobile. The reverse white pages won’t help you with this, but a reverse mobile number lookup will. There you can enter the number and see if a match comes up. At times, this might mean you pay for the information. When you have to know, however, that might not be a big deal to you.
What is Skype?
With so much hype about Skype going on nowadays, many of us are wondering who, or what, is Skype? Where is Skype? How much does it cost?
Skype is a service launched in 2003, which allows you to communicate with other Skype users free of charge: it allows you to send and receive text messages, talk and have video calls. All you need is a computer connected to the internet. You download a program, you install it, you register a Skype user, and you are up and running. So far so simple, but then again, what is Skype then? Is it only software? When you read or hear comments about Skype’s creators themselves, such as “Skype is not a phone” or that Skype is much better than a phone, or that it is not a replacement for your ordinary telephone service, you might end up scratching your head and asking yourself what is Skype all about. Well, there are many things you can do with Skype, and the basic service can be complemented in quite some ways. Everything will depend on your ongoing experience with Skype, and how do you want to use it.
Once installed, the program itself has the feel and look of any chat program. You can add contacts, block them, see it they are online, and communicate with them. You must have heard of a friend or relative who talks through Skype for free. Then, that is exactly what your friend or relative does: clicking on a contact that is online and talking once the call is answered. Millions of people have registered to the free service, shaping up a powerful network where the online users can be counted by millions worldwide. What is Skype up to with all this? Can they measure their success by millions of free users? Of course they can, since that network of free users form the client base that, sooner or later, will end up buying Skype credits. Now, what is “Skype credits”: You load your Skype account with money, and that becomes your Skype credit, that you use for the paid features. You can also use your Skype credits in a “pay as you go” fashion when you make calls to landlines and mobile calls anywhere in the world. When you run out of credits you can load some more, or you can set your account to load credits automatically when your credits go under a certain point (careful with those automatic payments, experiment and use the service first)
There is a lot more to find out. You will soon want to know what is Skype-in, Skype-out or what is “Skype to go”? Those ones are paid features, and they are always coming up with something new, such as different plans or sending SMS messages to mobile phones around the world. As a new user, it will be enough to know that you can make calls to telephones and mobile phones around the world at very competitive rates (Skype-out) and that you can have a telephone number so that they can call you to your Skype user from anywhere in the world (Skype-in), also at competitive rates. Not all the extra features are paid though: there are many programs available that extend the capabilities of Skype. Many of those programs are free, and some of them are drivers that allow you to use devices like a USB phone.
Paging Systems – Bringing Back the Cool Factor
It is interesting to see how the public perception and ‘street-cred’ of paging systems has changed over the years. Paging and pagers have been around for quite a long time but it was really back in the 1980s, those famous ‘yuppie years’, that they became widespread and used by many. Back then it was really a sign of the ultimate in coolness if you had a pager clipped to your belt. Your cool quotient also went up several degrees if somebody occasionally actually paged you on it!
Of course, things then quickly changed. In terms of a social accessory, the pager and paging systems may have scored highly in terms of conveying a certain image about you, but unfortunately they also meant that you could no longer make the excuse that you could not be contacted. The pager, coupled with the arrival of the mobile phone, really put an end to people being able to use the above excuse with employers or sometimes, hopefully rarely, the ‘other half’.
As a result, pagers started to be seen as being a necessary and valuable tool rather than a fashion item, and they also started to become eclipsed in ‘trendy’ terms by the arrival of sensibly sized mobile phones in the late 80s and early 1990s.
Yet times change, as do people’s perceptions. Today, the mobile phone has become part and parcel of daily humdrum life. Yes, it is possible to be impressed for a few moments by the latest model that has some sort of special screen or which can make your breakfast at the same time as you use it to browse the Internet. However, the fact is that mobile phones are no longer really ‘super-cool’. They have been around now for 30 years and while they are getting smaller and cleverer, in a social setting they are now taken for granted.
Yet it is a pretty different situation when one is talking about paging systems and radio pagers.
For some reason, and one can only speculate why, they still seem pretty cool if they go off while you are in a bar, restaurant or party. There is something about the radio pager that has connotations of urgency and importance that somehow has simply been lost in the area of mobile phones.
Possibly television has something to do with it. If you are a devotee of things such as House or CSI, you’ll regularly see apparently very important people being beeped for serious mission-critical reasons. Now OK, perhaps when your radio pager gets beeped, it is typically more likely to be your partner demanding to know if you’ve remembered the peas rather than the UN asking you to urgently fly out and resolve a global conflict. The point is though, that others around you don’t know that. As far as they are concerned, you have been paged so that must mean that you are pretty important stuff! This just cannot work with a mobile phone where everybody will hear you say, in a slightly hushed voice, “was that frozen or tinned dear?”
So paging systems, which were once cool and then spent a few years in the shadow of mobile phones, are now cool again!
Michael Harris is the Marketing Manager for Multitone Systems, a communications strategies company that has provided paging systems and pagers for organisations in the public and private sector for many years.
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With it’s free to download software, you can make calls to your friends, who are also using Skype, free of charge. Give Skype a try.
Dennis Jaylon is a renowned business writer who has years of experience in writing technical reviews, product descriptions and product feature analysis of technical gizmos like cordless phones, Panasonic phones, headsets.
Dan Krasky writes informative articles about telecommunications and phone numbering. You can find the caller source of any U.S. phone at http://www.searchthisphonenumber.com
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John Cooper would advise you to purchase from Cash for Mobiles
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