Recognizing the 21st
Century Inventors
Recognizing the 21st Century
Inventors is a corollary to my series of articles; recognizing first generation
and second generations inventors, which I started in November 2016 published
intermittently up to the last one on 30th March 2018 titled “Recognizing the Second Generation Inventors
V”. The articles were on inventions made by hardworking scientists and geniuses
across the globe. It was a kind of tribute to recognize inventors and their
inventions to address various challenges against humanity and environment or
increase efficiency of our daily chores.
Readers may recall that the last article on second-generation inventors was
on the invention of “cellular phone” popularly called “mobile phone”. Mr. Martin
Cooper, a north American based engineer, the then General Manager of Motorola
in the 1970s, was credited to be “the inventor of handheld cellular mobile
phone (distinct from the car phone) in 1973. Ten years after, he led the team
that fully developed a cellular phone and brought it to market in 1983. For
this reason, he is considered the "father of the cell phone" and is
also cited as the first person in history to make a handheld cellular phone
call in public, the first wireless mobile phone call on April 3, 1973. After
successful development of the phone, Martin took the phone, a Motorola early
model called DynaTAC, which was a brick phone weighing 1.13 Kilogram, measuring
23 centimeters long and 13 centimeters width, and featuring about 20 minutes of
battery life in the streets of New York City. He pressed the phone's "off
hook" button and he made a call to the landline of Bell Labs, where he was
connected to his counterpart, Joel Engel. "Joel, this is Marty," he
gleefully said, "I'm calling you from a cell phone, a real handheld
portable cell phone." "As I walked down the street while talking on
the phone," Martin later admitted, "sophisticated New Yorkers gaped
at the sight of someone actually moving around while making a phone call,"
Consequently, “the Dyna-TAC” was the first cellular phone finally introduced by
Motorola. It was the first commercially available mobile phone in 1983, which
was sold at a staggering cost of $3,500, then equivalent to £2,170 at time of the release.
Martin Cooper's role in conception and
development of the first portable cellular phone impacted his choice to start
and lead ArrayComm, a wireless technology and systems company founded in 1992.
ArrayComm's core adaptive antenna technology increases the capacity and
coverage of any cellular system and significantly lowers costs while making
cellular calls more reliable. The technology addresses what Martin calls
"the unfulfilled promise" of cellular, which should be, but still
isn't as reliable or affordable as wired telephone services. ArrayComm has also
used its adaptive antenna technology to make the Internet more
"personal" by creating the i-BURST Personal Broadband System, which
delivers high-speed, mobile Internet access that consumers can afford. "It's
very exciting to be part of a movement toward making broadband available to
people with the same freedom to be anywhere that they have for voice
communications today," Martin was quoted by an online publication
“ThoughtCo” on 19th April 2017. He further said. "People rely
heavily on the Internet for their work, entertainment, and communication, but
they need to be unleashed”. These series of articles and many others can be
accessed via my blog, www.breakthroughwithmkothman.blogspot.com
The 21st Century witnesses
several inventions that make life easy and enjoyable. Multiple inventors across
nations, tribes, and religious adherents worldwide made the inventions. The
easiness and joyousness of life made by these inventions are sometimes
countered by security threats related to some of the inventions (this is a
story for another day). Nevertheless, the inventors deserve full recognition
and accolade by the society for their ingenuity, creativity and vision. Till date,
the best invention of the 21st century is in Information and
Communication Technology (ICT) for its diversity, robustness and applicability
in all other sectors of development; transportation, agriculture, finance,
mining, and many others. After the invention of cell phone at the tail end of
20th Century, what were the “follow up” inventions that transformed
the cellular phone to its current status? How can life be without cellular
phone and Internet services today?
The earlier models of cellular phones like DynaTac
Nokia, Mobira and Talkman were heavy, bulky, massive and very expensive with
short-duration battery lives and shorter talk time, thus, were primarily used
in the sales and business world, but not often for personal use as popularly
done today. Overcoming these lapses – heaviness, short duration battery lives
and expensiveness became the major concerns of the innovators for the
subsequent cellular phones. The target
is to package all desirable features of phone users (customers) into a smaller,
portable, more affordable, efficient and durable cell phone model. Then, the
main purpose of the cell phone was simply “talking”. However, within a decade
or two, there was general shift from early cell phones made “just for talking”
to sophisticated means of communication individually and collectively. Progressively,
features like voicemail and camera were added until the emergence of smartphones,
which integrated several features and allow users to access email, use the
phone as a fax machine, pager, and address book. Thus, the shifting transformed
the cell phone communication tool to a multimedia tool with a robust diversity.
Now cell phones are used for surfing the websites, checking email, snapping
photos, and updating social media status than actually placing calls. No doubt,
the emergence of smartphone revolutionizes the entire cell phone industry.
Smartphones have excellent screen resolution that allow installation of
different software titles with an expanding capacity that can hold as much
memory as a desktop computer can do. This is assiduously replacing several media
gadgets, such as still and video cameras, scanners, fax machines, radio,
television and several others. Cellular phone is transformed into a virtual toolbox with a solution for almost
every need of humanity. This became possible when Internet service was
integrated with cellular phone and thus, the service is partly responsible of
the sophistication of the smartphones. Furthermore, the Internet service evolved
aptly with the creation of 3G networks in the early 2000s. 3G networks could
transmit data at broadband speeds. Smartphones could access websites as fast as
any computer could and thus, 3G networks permit phones to stream audio, video,
and display full websites. Which make of phones were the early “smartphones”?
Nokia was the king of these 2G phones in
the late 90s and early 2000s and then followed by Motorola Razr as the most
popular phone of the 3G. In the early 2000s, smartphones were mostly for
enterprise users. And the king of smartphones was still the BlackBerry, which was
mostly just used as emailing machine with phone capabilities. However, the
smartphone completely changed forever when Apple launched the touchscreen-only
iPhone in 2007 and then no one could favorably compete with iPhone. It took a
few years before the competition could catch up, although, they got a lot
better over time. Google was the first to come up with a viable competitor to
the iPhone with its Android operating system. The first Android phone debuted
in late 2008 on the T-Mobile G1, which was made by HTC. It wasn't as good as
the iPhone, but it was a great start and giving customers value for their
money. Android improved dramatically over a period of one year and began to
take off in late 2009 with the launch of the Motorola Droid on Verizon. The
phone had a brand new version of Android that held up pretty well against the
iPhone. It also had a physical keyboard and removable battery, two things
people couldn't get with the iPhone. Google introduced its first smartphone,
the Nexus One, in January 2010. HTC made the hardware, but it was still
considered as Google's phone. Unfortunately, the Nexus One turned out to be a
dud and Google stopped selling it within a few months. Shortly after the Nexus
One launched, other major manufacturers like Samsung and HTC began cranking out
a ton of Android phones. In 2010, Samsung debuted the first Galaxy S phone. HTC
introduced the EVO 4G. Both set a new standard for high-quality Android phones.
Microsoft was late to the new touch-based smartphone game. It launched Windows
Phone 7 at the tail end of 2010 to lukewarm reviews. Since then, Windows Phones
have gotten a lot better thanks to the most recent version of the OS, Windows
Phone 8. Who are the people or inventors of BlackBerry, Apple and Android
operation systems, responsible for making the so-called smartphones what they
are today? (To be continued next week)
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