Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
Mobile phones were first introduced in the early 1980s. In the succeeding years, the underlying technology has gone through three phases, known as generations. The first generation (1G) phones used analogue communication techniques: they were bulky and expensive, and were regarded as luxury items. Mobile phones only became widely used from the mid 1990s, with the introduction of second generation (2G) technologies such as the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM). These use more powerful digital communication techniques, which have allowed their cost to plummet, and have also allowed them to provide a wider range of services than before. Examples include text messaging, email and basic access to the Internet.
Third generation (3G) phones still use digital communications, but they send and receive their signals in a very different way from their predecessors. This allows them to support much higher data rates than before, and hence to provide more demanding services such as video calls and high speed Internet access. This book is about the most popular third generation technology, the Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS).
The first chapter lays the foundations for the subjects covered later in the book. It begins by briefly describing the architecture of a mobile telecommunication system, and continues with a more detailed look at two important aspects of its operation: the communication protocols that manage the delivery of information to and from a mobile phone, and the special techniques that are used for radio transmission and reception.
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