History of Wireless Communications
From Building the Wireless Future® to Expanding the Wireless Frontier™

1800's | 1900's | 2000's
1981
  • In May, the FCC announced the decision to award two cellular licenses per market—one for a wireline company and one for a non-wireline company.
 
1983 
  • Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) released using the 800 MHz to 900 MHz frequency band and the 30 kHz bandwidth for each channel as a fully automated mobile telephone service. AMPS is the first standardized cellular service in the world.
  • Motorola introduced the DynaTAC mobile telephone unit, the first truly “mobile” radiotelephone. The phone, dubbed the “brick”, had one hour of talk time and eight hours of standby.
  • October 13, 1983: The first commercial cellular system begins operating in Chicago. In December 1983, the second system activated in the Baltimore/Washington, D.C. corridor.

1984 
  • The Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association was founded.

1985 
  • The 100th cellular system is turned on in New Bedford, MA.

1986 
  • The FCC switched to a lottery system to license cellular markets. At the urging of industry, the FCC allocates an additional 10 MHz of spectrum for cellular telecommunications. Cellular subscribership tops 2 million. 1,000 cell sites across America
 
1987
  • Industry tops $1 billion in revenue.
 
1988
  • CIBER Record® for carriers created, which allows nationwide wireless services.
 
1989
  • Motorola announces the MicroTAC® personal cellular phone, which uses a flip-lid mouthpiece. The phone retails for an estimated $3000.

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