ALERT!! Here's my latest writing on mobile telephone history. 9,000 words, concentrating on developments after World War II. It's much easier to get into than this article if you're just interested in the cellular radio era. You can download it in .pdf format (internal link) or as a Word document (internal link). The .pdf is illustrated. Both versions have dozens of references. Comments are always welcome. Thanks, Tom
Introduction

Digital wireless and cellular roots go back to the 1940s when commercial mobile telephony began. Compared with the furious pace of development today, it may seem odd that mobile wireless hasn't progressed further in the last 60 years. Where's my real time video watch phone? There were many reasons for this delay but the most important ones were technology, cautiousness, and federal regulation.
As the loading coil and vacuum tube made possible the early
telephone network, the wireless revolution began only after low
cost microprocessors and digital switching became available.
The Bell System, producers of the finest landline telephone system
in the world, moved hesitatingly and at times with disinterest
toward wireless. Anything AT&T produced had to work reliably
with the rest of their network and it had to make economic sense,
something not possible for them with the few customers permitted
by the limited frequencies available at the time. Frequency availability
was in turn controlled by the Federal Communications Commission,
whose regulations and unresponsiveness constituted the most significant
factors hindering radio-telephone development, especially with
cellular radio, delaying that technology in America by perhaps
10 years.
In Europe and Japan, though, where governments could regulate their state run telephone companies less, mobile wireless came no sooner, and in most cases later than the United States. Japanese manufacturers, although not first with a working cellular radio, did equip some of the first car mounted mobile telephone services, their technology equal to whatever America was producing. Their products enabled several first commercial cellular telephone systems, starting in Bahrain, Tokyo, Osaka, and Mexico City.
Wireless and Radio Defined
Communicating wirelessly does not require radio. Everyone's
noticed how appliances like power saws cause havoc to A.M. radio
reception. By turning a saw on and off you can communicate wirelessly
over short distances using Morse code, with the radio as a receiver.
But causing electrical interference does not constitute a radio
transmission. Inductive and conductive schemes, which we will
look at shortly, also communicate wirelessly but are limited
in range, often difficult to implement, and do not fufill the
need to reliably and predictably communicate over long distances.
So let's see what radio is and then go over what it is not.
Weik defines radio as:
"1. A method of communicating over a distance by modulating
electromagnetic waves by means of an intelligence bearing-signal
and radiating these modulated waves by means of transmitter and
a receiver. 2. A device or pertaining to a device, that transmits
or receives electromagnetic waves in the frequency bands that
are between 10kHz and 3000 GHz."
Interestingly, the United States Federal Communications Commission
does not define radio but the U.S. General Services Administration
defined the term simply:
1. Telecommunication by modulation and radiation of electromagnetic
waves. 2. A transmitter, receiver, or transceiver used for communication
via electromagnetic waves. 3. A general term applied to the use
of radio waves.
Radio thus requires a modulated signal within the radio spectrum,
using a transmitter and a receiver. Modulation is a two part
process, a current called the carrier, and a signal which bears
information. We generate a continuous, high frequency carrier
wave, and then we modulate or vary that current with the signal
we wish to send. Notice how a voice signal varies the carrier
wave below:
This technique to modulate the carrier is called amplitude
modulation. Amplitude means strength. A.M. means a carrier wave
is modulated in proportion to the strength of a signal. The carrier
rises and falls instantaneously with each high and low of the
conversation.The voice current, in other words, produces an immediate
and equivalent change in the carrier.
Pre-History
As we can tell already, and as with the telephone (internal link), a radio is an electrical instrument.
A thorough understanding of electricity was necessary before
inventors could produce a reliable, practical radio system. That
understanding didn't happen quickly. Starting with the work of
Oersted in 1820 and continuing until and beyond Marconi's successful
radio system of 1897, dozens of inventors and scientists around
the world worked on different parts of the radio puzzle. In an
era of poor communication and non-systematic research, people
duplicated the work of others, misunderstood the results of other
inventors, and often misinterpreted the results they themselves
had achieved. While puzzling over the mysteries of radio, many
inventors worked concurrently on power generation, telegraphs,
lighting, and, later, telephones. We should start at the beginning.
In 1820 Danish physicist Christian Oersted discovered electromagnetism,
the critical idea needed to develop electrical power and to communicate.
In a famous experiment at his University of Copenhagen classroom,
Oersted pushed a compass under a live electric wire. This caused
its needle to turn from pointing north, as if acted on by a larger
magnet. Oersted discovered that an electric current creates a
magnetic field. But could a magnetic field create electricity?
If so, a new source of power beckoned. And the principle of electromagnetism,
if fully understood and applied, promised a new era of communication .
In
1821 Michael Faraday reversed Oersted's experiment and in so
doing discovered induction (internal link). He got a weak current to flow in a wire
revolving around a permanent magnet. In other words, a magnetic
field caused or induced an electric current to flow in
a nearby wire. In so doing, Faraday had built the world's first
electric generator. Mechanical energy could now be converted
to electrical energy. Is that clear? This is a very important
point. The simple act of moving ones' hand caused current to
flow. Mechanical energy into electrical energy. But current was
produced only when the magnetic field was in motion, that is,
when it was changing.
Faraday worked through different electrical problems in the
next ten years, eventually publishing his results on induction
in 1831. By that year many people were producing electrical dynamos.
But electromagnetism still needed understanding. Someone had
to show how to use it for communicating.
In 1830 the great American scientist Professor Joseph Henry
transmitted the first practical electrical signal. A short time
before Henry had invented the first efficient electromagnet.
He also concluded similar thoughts about induction before Faraday
but he didn't publish them first. Henry's place in electrical
history however, has always been secure, in particular for showing
that electromagnetism could do more than create current or pick
up heavy weights -- it could communicate.
In
a stunning demonstration in his Albany Academy classroom, Henry
created the forerunner of the telegraph. Henry first built an
electromagnet by winding an iron bar with several feet of wire.
A pivot mounted steel bar sat next to the magnet. A bell, in
turn, stood next to the bar. From the electromagnet Henry strung
a mile of wire around the inside of the classroom. He completed
the circuit by connecting the ends of the wires at a battery.
Guess what happened? The steel bar swung toward the magnet, of
course, striking the bell at the same time. Breaking the connection
released the bar and it was free to strike again. And while Henry
did not pursue electrical signaling, he did help someone who
did. And that man was Samuel Finley Breese Morse.