A mobile phone (also known as a cellular
phone, cell phone, and a hand phone) is a device that can
make and receive telephone calls over a radio link while moving around a wide
geographic area. It does so by connecting to a cellular
network provided by a mobile phone operator, allowing access to the
public telephone network.
By contrast, a cordless telephone is used only within the short
range of a single, private base station.
In addition to telephony, modern mobile phones
also support a wide variety of other services
such as text messaging, MMS, email, Internet
access, short-range wireless communications (infrared,
Bluetooth),
business applications, gaming and photography. Mobile phones that offer these
and more general computing capabilities are referred to as smartphones.
The first hand-held mobile phone was demonstrated
by John F. Mitchell[1][2][3] and Dr Martin Cooper of Motorola in
1973, using a handset weighing around 2.2 pounds (1 kg).[4]
In 1983, the DynaTAC 8000x was the first to be commercially
available. From 1990 to 2011, worldwide mobile phone subscriptions grew from
12.4 million to over 6 billion, penetrating about 87% of the global population
and reaching the bottom of the economic pyramid.[5][6][7][8]
In the first quarter of 2012, Nokia, which had been
the global market leader in mobile phones since 1998, slipped into second place
with 22.5% market share behind Samsung with 25.4% with Apple Inc.
trailing in third place with 9.5%.[9] In
2012, for the first time since 2009 mobile phone sales to end users declined by
1.7 percent to 1.75 billion units.[10]
Source: Wikipedia
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