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Mobile Telephone Service.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_Telephone_ServiceMobile Telephone Service. This system was introduced in 6-17-1946. Also known as Mobile Radio-Telephone Service.This was the founding father of the mobile phone. This system required operator assistence in order to complete a call. These units do not have direct dial capabilities. -
Improved Mobile Telephone System.
http://www.wirelessmuseum.org/historyImproved Mobile Telephone System. This system was introduced in 1969 to replace MTS. IMTS is best known for direct dial capabilities. A user was not required to connect to an operator to complete a call. IMTS units will have a keypad or dial similar to what you will find on a home phone. -
Advanced Mobile Phone System.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=694TX2lQ7Uohttp://www.wirelessmuseum.org/historyAdvanced Mobile Phone System. This system was introduced in 1983 by Bell Systems, the phone introduced by Motorola in 1973 and released for public use in 1983 with the Motorola 8000. AMPS also known as 1G and cellular, should not be confused with its European counterparts such as NMT, ETACS/TACS or JTACS. -
The Model T of mobiles.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBWneSL5MWIFrom brick to slickThe Model T of mobiles. The device was birthed from a fierce race between Motorola and Bell labs to bring the first portable to market. In 1973, Motorola's Dr. Martin Cooper won that race when he placed the first phone call on an early prototype that paved the way for the DynaTAC. -
MOTO's StarTAC,
While the DynaTAC may have been the first portable phone, MOTO's StarTAC, was the first that was actually pocketable. The 3.8 x 2.25 x 1-inch flip phone (at the time the smallest ever built) was considered minuscule, and its revolutionary clamshell form factor has been imitated ever sinc -
nokia
Although developers and carriers had been skeptical due to reception issues, this dot-com boom-era silver slider proved that a phone with a built-in internal antenna could be a hit with consumers. By bringing the antenna inside, it paved the way for a generation of phones that were not only more portable, but also more durable. -
: Kyocera QCP6035
If you're one of the many fans of the Palm OS-based Treo phone, you might want to thank Kyocera. The company's QCP6035 smart phone, which hit the retail market in early 2001 and cost between $400 and $500 (depending on the carrier), was the first Palm-based phone to be widely available to users. It included a measly 8MB of memory, and sported a bland monochrome display, but it paved the way for future products. -
Nokia 6160
In the late 1990s, Nokia's candybar-style cell phones were all the rage. Sporting a monochrome display, an external antenna, and a boxy, 5.2-inch tall frame, the Nokia 6160 was the company's best-selling handset of the 1990s. The somewhat sleeker Nokia 8260, introduced in 2000, added a colorful case and lost some of the 6160's bulk: it stood only about 4 inches tall and weighed 3.4 ounces, compared with almost 6 ounces for the 6160. -
Sidekick
T-Mobile Sidekick — was a geek's phone of choice, thanks to always-online connectivity, a massive 240 x 160 LCD screen and a flip-open QWERTY keyboard. Just as the BlackBerry and Treo were synonymous with the MBA set, the Sidekick announced your status as a web jockey. -
Treo 600
Along with the Hiptop and BlackBerry, it ushered in the age of the smartphone. Designed for the mobile business sector, it also had a bevy of fun-loving features, like a 640 × 480 VGA camera, and integrated MP3 player that let you rock out with your spreadsheet out. -
Razr
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_RAZRIts slender housing, clean lines, subtle keypad and multiple color schemes created a world where industrial design was on par with industrial function. The phone moved more than 100 million units, a feat MOTO has been unable to reproduce. -
Iphone
The first iPhone was unveiled by Steve Jobs, then CEO of Apple, on January 9, 2007,[1] and released on June 29, 2007. The 5th generation iPhone, the iPhone 4S, was announced on October 4, 2011, and released on October 14, 2011, two days after the release of iOS 5.0, the Apple operating system for handheld devices. -
Google, T-Mobile introduce first Android phone
Google and T-Mobile finally took the wraps off the T-Mobile G1, the first phone to use the Internet giant's Android operating system. The phone, the first of several to come, crystallizes Google's ambition to create an open mobile environment that gives users access to a wide variety of applications and the mobile Internet, which Google hopes to capitalize on through advertising. -
iPhone 3GS
The iPhone 3GS is the third generation of iPhone designed and marketed by Apple Inc. It was introduced on June 8, 2009 at the WWDC 2009 which took place at the Moscone Center, San Francisco. -
HTC MyTouch Slide Mobile Phone Surfaced
The much awaited HTC MyTouch Slide aka the Espresso handset is going rounds now. As per the initial pictures, the phone seems to be an eye-catching one with hordes of features. The MyTouch Slide phone is supposed to come up with a larger keyboard and a Blackberry like trackpad to serve as a push button. The device also has the slide-out four row QWERTY keyboard. The set is powered by the 1300mAH Battery and there is also a camera with LED flash. The set is also incorporated with MicroSD memo -
Iphone 4s
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPhone_4The iPhone (pronounced /ˈaɪfoʊn/ eye-fohn) is a line of Internet and multimedia-enabled smartphones marketed by Apple Inc. The first iPhone was unveiled by Steve Jobs, then CEO of Apple, on January 9, 2007,[1] and released on June 29, 2007. The 5th generation iPhone, the iPhone 4S, was announced on October 4, 2011, and released on October 14, 2011, two days after the release of iOS 5.0, the Apple operating system for handheld devices -
Motorola RAZR
Because Motorola relied so long upon the RAZR and its derivatives[6][7] and was slow to develop new products in the growing market for feature-rich touchscreen and 3G phones[8], the RAZR's appeal declined while rival offerings like the LG Chocolate, BlackBerry, and iPhone captured consumer attention, leading Motorola to eventually drop behind Samsung and LG in market share for mobile phones.[9] Motorola's strategy of grabbing market share by selling tens of millions of low-cost RAZRs cut into ma