The history of mobile phones covers mobile communication devices that connect wirelessly to the public switched telephone network.
While the transmission of speech by radio
has a long history, the first devices that were wireless, mobile, and
also capable of connecting to the standard telephone network are much
more recent. The fit such devices were barely portable compared to
today's compact hand-held devices, and their use was clumsy.
Along with the process of developing a more portable technology,
and a better interconnections system, drastic changes have taken place
in both the networking of wireless communication and the prevalence of
its use, with smartphones becoming common globally and a growing proportion of Internet access now done via mobile broadband.
Foundations
Predecessors
In
1908, a Professor Albert Jahnke and the Oakland Transcontinental Aerial
Telephone and Power Company claimed to have developed a wireless
telephone. They were accused of fraud and the charge was then dropped,
but they do not seem to have proceeded with production. Beginning in 1918, the German railroad system tested wireless telephony on military trains between Berlin and Zossen. In 1924, public trials started with telephone connection on trains between Berlin and Hamburg. In 1925, the company Zugtelephonie AG was founded to supply train telephony equipment and, in 1926, telephone service in trains of the Deutsche Reichsbahn and the German mail service on the route between Hamburg and Berlin was approved and offered to first-class travelers.
Fiction anticipated the development of real world mobile telephones. In 1906, the English caricaturist Lewis Baumer published a cartoon in Punch magazine entitled "Forecasts for 1907" in which he showed a man and a woman in London's Hyde Park each separately engaged in gambling and dating on wireless telephony equipment. Then, in 1926, the artist Karl Arnold
created a visionary cartoon about the use of mobile phones in the
street, in the picture "wireless telephony", published in the German
satirical magazine Simplicissimus.
The Second World War made military use of radio telephony links. Hand-held radio transceivers
have been available since the 1940s. Mobile telephones for automobiles
became available from some telephone companies in the 1940s. Early
devices were bulky, consumed large amounts of power, and the network
supported only a few simultaneous conversations. Modern cellular networks allow automatic and pervasive use of mobile phones for voice and data communications.
In the United States, engineers from Bell Labs began work on a
system to allow mobile users to place and receive telephone calls from
automobiles, leading to the inauguration of mobile service on June 17,
1946 in St. Louis, Missouri. Shortly after, AT&T offered Mobile Telephone Service.
A wide range of mostly incompatible mobile telephone services offered
limited coverage area and only a few available channels in urban areas.
As calls were transmitted as unencrypted analog signals, they could be
eavesdropped on by anyone with radio equipment that could receive those
frequencies. The introduction of cellular technology, which allowed
re-use of frequencies many times in small adjacent areas covered by
relatively low-powered transmitters, made widespread adoption of mobile
telephones economically feasible.
In the USSR, Leonid Kupriyanovich,
an engineer from Moscow, in 1957-1961 developed and presented a number
of experimental pocket-sized communications radio. The weight of one
model, presented in 1961, was only 70 g and could fit on a palm. However, in the USSR the decision at first to develop the system of the automobile "Altai" phone was made.
In 1965, the Bulgarian company "Radioelektronika" presented a
mobile automatic phone combined with a base station at the Inforga-65
international exhibition in Moscow. Solutions of this phone were based
on a system developed by Leonid Kupriyanovich. One base station, connected to one telephone wire line, could serve up to 15 customers.
The advances in mobile telephony can be traced in successive generations
from the early "0G" services like MTS and its successor Improved Mobile
Telephone Service, to first-generation (1G) analog cellular network,
second-generation (2G) digital cellular networks, third-generation (3G)
broadband data services to the state-of-the-art, fourth-generation (4G)
native-IP networks.
Underlying technology
The development of metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) large-scale integration (LSI) technology, information theory and cellular networking led to the development of affordable mobile communications. There was a rapid growth of wireless telecommunications towards the end of the 20th century, primarily due to the introduction of digital signal processing in wireless communications, driven by the development of low-cost, very large-scale integration (VLSI) RF CMOS (radio-frequency complementary MOS) technology.
The development of cell phone technology was enabled by advances in MOSFET (metal-oxide-silicon field-effect transistor) semiconductor device fabrication. The MOSFET (MOS transistor), invented by Mohamed Atalla and Dawon Kahng at Bell Labs in 1959, is the basic building block of modern cell phones. MOSFET scaling, where MOS transistors get smaller with decreasing power consumption, enabled very large-scale integration (VLSI) technology, with MOS transistor counts in integrated circuit chips increasing at an exponential pace, as predicted by Moore's law. Continuous MOSFET scaling eventually made it possible to build portable cell phones. A typical modern smartphone is built from billions of tiny MOSFETs as of 2019, used in integrated circuits such as microprocessors and memory chips, as power devices, and as thin-film transistors (TFTs) in mobile displays.
Advances in MOSFET power electronic technology also enabled the development of digital wireless mobile networks, which are essential to modern cell phones. The wide adoption of power MOSFET, LDMOS (lateral diffused MOS) and RF CMOS (radio frequency CMOS)
devices led to the development and proliferation of digital wireless
mobile networks by the 1990s, with further advances in MOSFET technology
leading to increasing bandwidth during the 2000s. Most of the essential elements of wireless mobile networks are built from MOSFETs, including the mobile transceivers, base station modules, routers, RF power amplifiers, telecommunication circuits, RF circuits, and radio transceivers, in networks such as 2G, 3G, and 4G.
Another important enabling factor was the lithium-ion battery, which became indispensable as an energy source for cell phones. The lithium-ion battery was invented by John Goodenough, Rachid Yazami and Akira Yoshino in the 1980s, and commercialized by Sony and Asahi Kasei in 1991.
Early services
MTS
In 1949, AT&T commercialized Mobile Telephone Service.
From its start in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1946, AT&T introduced
Mobile Telephone Service to one hundred towns and highway corridors by
1948. Mobile Telephone Service was a rarity with only 5,000 customers
placing about 30,000 calls each week. Calls
were set up manually by an operator and the user had to depress a button
on the handset to talk and release the button to listen. The call
subscriber equipment weighed about 80 pounds (36 kg).
Subscriber growth and revenue generation were hampered by the
constraints of the technology. Because only three radio channels were
available, only three customers in any given city could make mobile
telephone calls at one time.
Mobile Telephone Service was expensive, costing US$15 per month, plus
$0.30–0.40 per local call, equivalent to (in 2012 US dollars) about $176
per month and $3.50–4.75 per call.
In the UK, there was also a vehicle-based system called "Post Office Radiophone Service," which was launched around the city of Manchester
in 1959, and although it required callers to speak to an operator, it
was possible to be put through to any subscriber in Great Britain. The
service was extended to London in 1965 and other major cities in 1972.
IMTS
AT&T introduced the first major improvement to mobile telephony in 1965, giving the improved service the obvious name of Improved Mobile Telephone Service.
IMTS used additional radio channels, allowing more simultaneous calls
in a given geographic area, introduced customer dialing, eliminating
manual call setup by an operator, and reduced the size and weight of the
subscriber equipment.
Despite the capacity improvement offered by IMTS, demand
outstripped capacity. In agreement with state regulatory agencies,
AT&T limited the service to just 40,000 customers system wide. In New York City, for example, 2,000 customers shared just 12 radio channels and typically had to wait 30 minutes to place a call.
Radio Common Carrier
Radio Common Carrier or RCC
was a service introduced in the 1960s by independent telephone
companies to compete against AT&T's IMTS. RCC systems used paired
UHF 454/459 MHz and VHF 152/158 MHz frequencies near those used by IMTS.
RCC based services were provided until the 1980s when cellular AMPS
systems made RCC equipment obsolete.
Some RCC systems were designed to allow customers of adjacent
carriers to use their facilities, but equipment used by RCCs did not
allow the equivalent of modern "roaming" because technical standards
were not uniform. For example, the phone of an Omaha, Nebraska–based
RCC service would not be likely to work in Phoenix, Arizona. Roaming was
not encouraged, in part, because there was no centralized industry
billing database for RCCs. Signaling formats were not standardized. For
example, some systems used two-tone sequential paging to alert a mobile of an incoming call. Other systems used DTMF. Some used Secode 2805,
which transmitted an interrupted 2805 Hz tone (similar to IMTS
signaling) to alert mobiles of an offered call. Some radio equipment
used with RCC systems was half-duplex, push-to-talk LOMO equipment such
as Motorola hand-helds or RCA 700-series conventional two-way radios.
Other vehicular equipment had telephone handsets and rotary dials or
pushbutton pads, and operated full duplex like a conventional wired
telephone. A few users had full-duplex briefcase telephones (radically
advanced for their day).
At the end of RCC's existence, industry associations were working
on a technical standard that would have allowed roaming, and some
mobile users had multiple decoders to enable operation with more than
one of the common signaling formats (600/1500, 2805, and Reach). Manual
operation was often a fallback for RCC roamers.
Other services
In 1969 Penn Central Railroad equipped commuter trains along the 360 kilometres (220 mi) New York-Washington
route with special pay phones that allowed passengers to place
telephone calls while the train was moving. The system re-used six
frequencies in the 450 MHz band in nine sites.
In the UK, Channel Islands and elsewhere the "Rabbit" phone
system was briefly used, being a hybrid of "cell" base stations and
handsets. One major limitation was that you had to be less than 300 feet
(closer with buildings) from a base due to power limitations on a
portable device.
With modern technology a similar variant is being considered for Apple's
new 4G "smart watch" so they can be used in large events in a broadly
similar way to a femtocell.
European mobile radio networks
In Europe, several mutually incompatible mobile radio services were developed.
In 1966 Norway had a system called OLT which was manually controlled. Finland's ARP, launched in 1971, was also manual as was the Swedish MTD. All were replaced by the automatic NMT, (Nordic Mobile Telephone) system in the early 1980s.
In July 1971 Readycall was introduced in London by Burndept after
obtaining a special concession to break the Post Office monopoly to
allow selective calling to mobiles of calls from the public telephone
system. This system was available to the public for a subscription of
£16 month. A year later the service was extended to two other UK towns.
West Germany had a network called A-Netz launched in 1952 as the country's first public commercial mobile phone network. In 1972 this was displaced by B-Netz which connected calls automatically.
The cellular concept
In December 1947, Douglas H. Ring and W. Rae Young, Bell Labs engineers, proposed hexagonal cells for mobile phones in vehicles.
At this stage, the technology to implement these ideas did not exist,
nor had the frequencies been allocated. Two decades would pass before Richard H. Frenkiel, Joel S. Engel and Philip T. Porter
of Bell Labs expanded the early proposals into a much more detailed
system plan. It was Porter who first proposed that the cell towers use
the now-familiar directional antennas to reduce interference and
increase channel reuse (see picture at right) Porter also invented the dial-then-send method used by all cell phones to reduce wasted channel time.
In all these early examples, a mobile phone had to stay within
the coverage area serviced by one base station throughout the phone
call, i.e. there was no continuity of service as the phones moved
through several cell areas. The concepts of frequency reuse and handoff,
as well as a number of other concepts that formed the basis of modern
cell phone technology, were described in the late 1960s, in papers by
Frenkiel and Porter. In 1970 Amos E. Joel, Jr., a Bell Labs engineer, invented a "three-sided trunk circuit" to aid in the "call handoff"
process from one cell to another. His patent contained an early
description of the Bell Labs cellular concept, but as switching systems
became faster, such a circuit became unnecessary and was never
implemented in a system.
A cellular telephone switching plan was described by Fluhr and Nussbaum in 1973, and a cellular telephone data signaling system was described in 1977 by Hachenburg et al.
Emergence of automated services
The first fully automated mobile phone system for vehicles was launched in Sweden in 1956. Named MTA (Mobiltelefonisystem A), it allowed calls to be made and received in the car using a rotary dial.
The car phone could also be paged. Calls from the car were direct dial,
whereas incoming calls required an operator to locate the nearest base
station to the car. It was developed by Sture Laurén and other engineers
at Televerket network operator. Ericsson provided the switchboard while Svenska Radioaktiebolaget (SRA) and Marconi provided the telephones and base station equipment. MTA phones consisted of vacuum tubes and relays, and weighed 40 kilograms (88 lb). In 1962, an upgraded version called Mobile System B (MTB) was introduced. This was a push-button telephone, and used transistors and DTMF signaling to improve its operational reliability. In 1971 the MTD version was launched, opening for several different brands of equipment and gaining commercial success.[34][35] The network remained open until 1983 and still had 600 customers when it closed.
In 1958 development began on a similar system for motorists in the USSR. The "Altay"
national civil mobile phone service was based on Soviet MRT-1327
standard. The main developers of the Altay system were the Voronezh
Science Research Institute of Communications (VNIIS) and the State
Specialized Project Institute (GSPI). In 1963 the service started in
Moscow, and by 1970 was deployed in 30 cities across the USSR. Versions
of the Altay system are still in use today as a trunking system in some parts of Russia.
In 1959 a private telephone company in Brewster, Kansas, USA, the
S&T Telephone Company, (still in business today) with the use of
Motorola Radio Telephone equipment and a private tower facility, offered
to the public mobile telephone services in that local area of NW
Kansas. This system was a direct dial up service through their local
switchboard, and was installed in many private vehicles including grain
combines, trucks, and automobiles. For some as yet unknown reason, the
system, after being placed online and operated for a very brief time
period, was shut down. The management of the company was immediately
changed, and the fully operable system and related equipment was
immediately dismantled in early 1960, not to be seen again.
In 1966, Bulgaria presented the pocket mobile automatic phone
RAT-0,5 combined with a base station RATZ-10 (RATC-10) on
Interorgtechnika-66 international exhibition. One base station,
connected to one telephone wire line, could serve up to six customers
("Radio" magazine, 2, 1967; "Novosti dnya" newsreel, 37, 1966).
One of the first successful public commercial mobile phone networks was the ARP network in Finland, launched in 1971. Posthumously, ARP is sometimes viewed as a zero generation (0G) cellular network, being slightly above previous proprietary and limited coverage networks.
Handheld mobile phone
Prior to 1973, mobile telephony was limited to phones installed in cars and other vehicles. Motorola was the first company to produce a handheld mobile phone. On April 3, 1973, Martin Cooper, a Motorola researcher and executive, made the first mobile telephone call from handheld subscriber equipment, placing a call to Dr. Joel S. Engel of Bell Labs, his rival.
The prototype handheld phone used by Dr. Cooper weighed 1.1 kilograms
(2.4 lb) and measured 23 by 13 by 4.5 centimetres (9.1 by 5.1 by
1.8 in). The prototype offered a talk time of just 30 minutes and took
10 hours to re-charge.
John F. Mitchell,
Motorola's chief of portable communication products and Cooper's boss
in 1973, played a key role in advancing the development of handheld
mobile telephone equipment. Mitchell failed to push Motorola into
developing wireless communication products that would be small enough to
use anywhere and participated in the design of the cellular phone.
The early generations
Newer
technology has been developed and rolled out in a series of waves or
generations. The "generation" terminology only became widely used when
3G was launched, but is now used retroactively when referring to the
earlier systems.
1G – Analog cellular
First automatic analog cellular systems deployed were NTT's system first used in Tokyo in 1979, later spreading to the whole of Japan, and NMT in the Nordic countries in 1981.
The first analog cellular system widely deployed in North America was the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS).
It was commercially introduced in the Americas in 13 October 1983,
Israel in 1986, and Australia in 1987. AMPS was a pioneering technology
that helped drive mass market usage of cellular technology, but it had
several serious issues by modern standards. It was unencrypted and
easily vulnerable to eavesdropping via a scanner; it was susceptible to cell phone "cloning" and it used a Frequency-division multiple access (FDMA) scheme and required significant amounts of wireless spectrum to support.
On 6 March 1983, the DynaTAC 8000X mobile phone launched on the first US 1G network by Ameritech. It cost $100M to develop, and took over a decade to reach the market.
The phone had a talk time of just thirty-five minutes and took ten
hours to charge. Consumer demand was strong despite the battery life,
weight, and low talk time, and waiting lists were in the thousands.
Many of the iconic early commercial cell phones such as the Motorola DynaTAC Analog AMPS were eventually superseded by Digital AMPS (D-AMPS) in 1990, and AMPS service was shut down by most North American carriers by 2008.
In February 1986 Australia launched its Cellular Telephone System
by Telecom Australia. Peter Reedman was the first Telecom Customer to
be connected on 6 January 1986 along with five other subscribers as test
customers prior to the official launch date of 28 February.
2G – Digital cellular
In the 1990s, the 'second generation' mobile phone systems emerged.
Two systems competed for supremacy in the global market: the European
developed GSM
standard and the U.S. developed CDMA standard. These differed from the
previous generation by using digital instead of analog transmission, and
also fast out-of-band phone-to-network signaling. The rise in mobile phone usage as a result of 2G was explosive and this era also saw the advent of prepaid mobile phones.
In 1991 the first GSM network (Radiolinja) launched in Finland.
In general the frequencies used by 2G systems in Europe were higher
than those in America, though with some overlap. For example, the
900 MHz frequency range was used for both 1G and 2G systems in Europe,
so the 1G systems were rapidly closed down to make space for the 2G
systems. In America the IS-54 standard was deployed in the same band as AMPS and displaced some of the existing analog channels.
In 1993, IBM Simon
was introduced. This was possibly the world's first smartphone. It was a
mobile phone, pager, fax machine, and PDA all rolled into one. It
included a calendar, address book, clock, calculator, notepad, email,
and a touchscreen with a QWERTY keyboard.
The IBM Simon had a stylus, used to tap the touch screen. It featured
predictive typing that would guess the next characters as you tapped. It
had applications, or at least a way to deliver more features by
plugging a PCMCIA 1.8 MB memory card into the phone.
Coinciding with the introduction of 2G systems was a trend away from the
larger "brick" phones toward tiny 100–200 grams (3.5–7.1 oz) hand-held
devices. This change was possible not only through technological
improvements such as more advanced batteries and more energy-efficient
electronics, but also because of the higher density of cell sites to
accommodate increasing usage. The latter meant that the average distance
transmission from phone to the base station shortened, leading to
increased battery life while on the move.
The second generation introduced a new variant of communication
called SMS or text messaging. It was initially available only on GSM
networks but spread eventually on all digital networks. The first
machine-generated SMS message was sent in the UK on 3 December 1992
followed in 1993 by the first person-to-person SMS sent in Finland. The
advent of prepaid services in the late 1990s soon made SMS the communication method of choice among the young, a trend which spread across all ages.
2G also introduced the ability to access media content on mobile
phones. In 1998 the first downloadable content sold to mobile phones was
the ring tone, launched by Finland's Radiolinja (now Elisa).
Advertising on the mobile phone first appeared in Finland when a free
daily SMS news headline service was launched in 2000, sponsored by
advertising.
Mobile payments were trialed in 1998 in Finland and Sweden where a
mobile phone was used to pay for a Coca-Cola vending machine and car
parking. Commercial launches followed in 1999 in Norway. The first
commercial payment system to mimic banks and credit cards was launched
in the Philippines in 1999 simultaneously by mobile operators Globe and
Smart.
The first full internet service on mobile phones was introduced by NTT DoCoMo in Japan in 1999.
3G – Mobile broadband
As the use of 2G phones became more widespread and people began to
use mobile phones in their daily lives, it became clear that demand for
data (such as access to browse the internet) was growing. Further,
experience from fixed broadband services showed there would also be an
ever-increasing demand for greater data speeds. The 2G technology was
nowhere near up to the job, so the industry began to work on the next
generation of technology known as 3G. The main technological difference
that distinguishes 3G technology from 2G technology is the use of packet switching rather than circuit switching for data transmission.
In addition, the standardization process focused on requirements more
than technology (2 Mbit/s maximum data rate indoors, 384 kbit/s
outdoors, for example).
Inevitably this led to many competing standards with different
contenders pushing their own technologies, and the vision of a single
unified worldwide standard looked far from reality. The standard 2G CDMA networks became 3G compliant with the adoption of Revision A to EV-DO, which made several additions to the protocol while retaining backwards compatibility:
- Introduction of several new forward link data rates that increase the maximum burst rate from 2.45 Mbit/s to 3.1 Mbit/s
- Protocols that would decrease connection establishment time
- Ability for more than one mobile to share the same time slot
- Introduction of QoS flags
All these were put in place to allow for low latency, low bit rate communications such as VoIP.
The first pre-commercial trial network with 3G was launched by
NTT DoCoMo in Japan in the Tokyo region in May 2001. NTT DoCoMo launched
the first commercial 3G network on 1 October 2001, using the WCDMA
technology. In 2002 the first 3G networks on the rival CDMA2000 1xEV-DO
technology were launched by SK Telecom and KTF in South Korea, and Monet
in the US. Monet has since gone bankrupt. By the end of 2002, the
second WCDMA network was launched in Japan by Vodafone KK (now
Softbank). European launches of 3G were in Italy and the UK by
Three/Hutchison group, on WCDMA. 2003 saw a further eight commercial
launches of 3G, six more on WCDMA and two more on the EV-DO standard.
During the development of 3G systems, 2.5G systems such as CDMA2000 1x and GPRS
were developed as extensions to existing 2G networks. These provide
some of the features of 3G without fulfilling the promised high data
rates or full range of multimedia services. CDMA2000-1X delivers
theoretical maximum data speeds of up to 307 kbit/s. Just beyond these
is the EDGE
system which in theory covers the requirements for 3G system, but is so
narrowly above these that any practical system would be sure to fall
short.
The high connection speeds of 3G technology enabled a
transformation in the industry: for the first time, media streaming of
radio (and even television) content to 3G handsets became possible, with companies such as RealNetworks and Disney among the early pioneers in this type of offering.
In the mid-2000s, an evolution of 3G technology began to be implemented, namely High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA). It is an enhanced 3G (third generation) mobile telephony communications protocol in the High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA) family, also coined 3.5G, 3G+ or turbo 3G, which allows networks based on Universal Mobile Telecommunications System
(UMTS) to have higher data transfer speeds and capacity. Current HSDPA
deployments support down-link speeds of 1.8, 3.6, 7.2 and 14.0 Mbit/s.
By the end of 2007, there were 295 million subscribers on 3G
networks worldwide, which reflected 9% of the total worldwide subscriber
base. About two thirds of these were on the WCDMA standard and one
third on the EV-DO standard. The 3G telecoms services generated over
$120 billion of revenues during 2007 and at many markets the majority of
new phones activated were 3G phones. In Japan and South Korea the
market no longer supplies phones of the second generation.
Although mobile phones had long had the ability to access data
networks such as the Internet, it was not until the widespread
availability of good quality 3G coverage in the mid-2000s (decade) that
specialized devices appeared to access the mobile web. The first such devices, known as "dongles", plugged directly into a computer through the USB port. Another new class of device appeared subsequently, the so-called "compact wireless router" such as the Novatel MiFi, which makes 3G Internet connectivity available to multiple computers simultaneously over Wi-Fi, rather than just to a single computer via a USB plug-in.
Such devices became especially popular for use with laptop
computers due to the added portability they bestow. Consequently, some
computer manufacturers started to embed the mobile data function
directly into the laptop so a dongle or MiFi wasn't needed. Instead, the
SIM card
could be inserted directly into the device itself to access the mobile
data services. Such 3G-capable laptops became commonly known as
"netbooks". Other types of data-aware devices followed in the netbook's
footsteps. By the beginning of 2010, E-readers, such as the Amazon Kindle and the Nook from Barnes & Noble, had already become available with embedded wireless Internet, and Apple had announced plans for embedded wireless Internet on its iPad tablet devices later that year.
4G – Native IP networks
By 2009, it had become clear that, at some point, 3G networks would
be overwhelmed by the growth of bandwidth-intensive applications like
streaming media.
Consequently, the industry began looking to data-optimized
4th-generation technologies, with the promise of speed improvements up
to 10-fold over existing 3G technologies. The first two commercially
available technologies billed as 4G were the WiMAX standard (offered in the U.S. by Sprint) and the LTE standard, first offered in Scandinavia by TeliaSonera.
One of the main ways in which 4G differed technologically from 3G was in its elimination of circuit switching,
instead employing an all-IP network. Thus, 4G ushered in a treatment of
voice calls just like any other type of streaming audio media, using
packet switching over Internet, LAN or WAN networks via VoIP.
5G - Cellular Mobile Communications
Mobile device charger standards
Port | Current | Voltage | Power (max) |
---|---|---|---|
Micro-USB | 500 mA | 5 V | 2.5 W |
1 A | 5 V | 5 W | |
2 A | 5 V | 10 W | |
USB-C | 100 mA to 3 A | 5 V | 15 W |
1.7 A to 3 A | 9 V | 27 W | |
1.8 A to 3 A | 15 V | 45 W | |
2.25 A to 5 A | 20 V | 100 W |
Before a universal charger standard was agreed upon in the late 2000s
users needed an adapter which was often proprietary by brand or
manufacturer to charge their battery. Later, mobile phones from major
brands typically used a USB cable with a mini or micro-USB or, since the mid-2010s, USB-C interface. Apple's iPhone is the sole major brand to retain its own interface (30-pin dock connector replaced by Lightning in 2012).
In China
As of 14 June 2007, all new mobile phones applying for a license in China are required to use a USB port as a power port for battery charging. This was the first standard to use the convention of shorting D+ and D−.
OMTP/GSMA Universal Charging Solution
In September 2007, the Open Mobile Terminal Platform group (a forum of mobile network operators and manufacturers such as Nokia, Samsung, Motorola, Sony Ericsson, and LG) announced that its members had agreed on Micro-USB as the future common connector for mobile devices.
The GSM Association (GSMA) followed suit on 17 February 2009, and on 22 April 2009, this was further endorsed by the CTIA – The Wireless Association, with the International Telecommunication Union
(ITU) announcing on 22 October 2009 that it had also embraced the
Universal Charging Solution as its "energy-efficient
one-charger-fits-all new mobile phone solution," and added: "Based on
the Micro-USB interface, UCS chargers will also include a 4-star or
higher efficiency rating—up to three times more energy-efficient than an
unrated charger."
EU smartphone power supply standard
In June 2009, many of the world's largest mobile phone manufacturers signed an EC-sponsored Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), agreeing to make most data-enabled mobile phones marketed in the European Union compatible with a common External Power Supply
(common EPS). The EU's common EPS specification (EN 62684:2010)
references the USB Battery Charging Specification and is similar to the
GSMA/OMTP and Chinese charging solutions. In January 2011, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) released its version of the (EU's) common EPS standard as IEC 62684:2011.
Satellite mobile
As well as the now-common cellular phone, there is also the very
different approach of connecting directly from the handset to an
Earth-orbiting satellite. Such mobile phones can be used in remote areas
out of reach of wired networks or where construction of a cellular
network is uneconomic.
The Inmarsat system is the oldest, originally developed in 1979 for safety of life at sea, and uses a series of satellites in geostationary orbits
to cover the majority of the globe. Several smaller operators use the
same approach with just one or two satellites to provide a regional
service. An alternative approach is to use a series of low Earth orbit satellites much closer to Earth. This is the basis of the Iridium and Globalstar satellite phone services.