When did
Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2008 8:40 pm
Cell phones become generally commercially viable? I don't remember many people having them until about '95.
'95 is about when you started seeing them as something in the mainstream.TheCalvinator24 wrote:Cell phones become generally commercially viable? I don't remember many people having them until about '95.
The Motorola units were a lot smaller than a WWII Handie Talkie (a Walkie-Talkie was backback sized).TheCalvinator24 wrote:1983? I'm talking about when the average person started getting them. When they stopped costing more than $1000, and were smaller than a WWII issue walkie-talkie
They cost $749.Bob Juch wrote:The Motorola units were a lot smaller than a WWII Handie Talkie (a Walkie-Talkie was backback sized).TheCalvinator24 wrote:1983? I'm talking about when the average person started getting them. When they stopped costing more than $1000, and were smaller than a WWII issue walkie-talkie
They are less evil than squirrels.littlebeast13 wrote:Cell phones are evil....
lb13
Miss Placentia, I don't mean to be argumentative, but those squirrels are not giving back rubs. I see squirrels doing that a lot, and it makes me so mad! They are right out in public, where my little sister can see them, too. I yell at them: "Get a nest!"PlacentiaSoccerMom wrote:Speaking of squirrels, I was looking for a picture of an evil squirrel to put on my last post.
I found this picture of squirrels and they don't look very evil. One of the squirrels is massaging the other squirrel's back.
Spoiler
I was one of those people.kayrharris wrote:I recall several people on the bored getting cell phones just so they could wait for THE callback on the phone game. That had to have been 2000.
I was one of those, at least partially. The primary reason we got them was to be able to contact each other (after a farcical turn of events), but it also made it possible for me to get a callback without having to wait by a land line.kayrharris wrote:I recall several people on the bored getting cell phones just so they could wait for THE callback on the phone game. That had to have been 2000.
I know the permanently mounted ones in vehicles were several years prior to that.
You're still welcome. Those were good times.silvercamaro wrote:I was one of those people.kayrharris wrote:I recall several people on the bored getting cell phones just so they could wait for THE callback on the phone game. That had to have been 2000.
I remain grateful that BiT got his cell phone when he did, too, because it was his call from the parking lot of his child's nursery school that secured an audition slot for me in one of the earliest road trips. Thanks again, BiT!
earendel wrote:I was one of those, at least partially. The primary reason we got them was to be able to contact each other (after a farcical turn of events), but it also made it possible for me to get a callback without having to wait by a land line.kayrharris wrote:I recall several people on the bored getting cell phones just so they could wait for THE callback on the phone game. That had to have been 2000.
I know the permanently mounted ones in vehicles were several years prior to that.
I think about that very often - there's still very poor reception (at least for my carrier's signal) in the Fellowship Hall of our church, which is where I was when the call came. Had I not been near the rear of the room I might have ended up like TR.littlebeast13 wrote:earendel wrote:I was one of those, at least partially. The primary reason we got them was to be able to contact each other (after a farcical turn of events), but it also made it possible for me to get a callback without having to wait by a land line.kayrharris wrote:I recall several people on the bored getting cell phones just so they could wait for THE callback on the phone game. That had to have been 2000.
I know the permanently mounted ones in vehicles were several years prior to that.
At least you didn't enter The Dead ZoneĀ®.....
lb13
ulysses5019 wrote:My memory is hazy, but wasn't there controversy about tr's encounter with the dead zone?
In the summer of 1993---when I was pregnant, had moved to the country, but still had a 70-mile commute to Chicago---I had what I guess would be considered a cell phone, although it was about the size of a conventional phone receiver. It was a Motorola and had Verizon service. We got the phone lest I become stranded on the country roads. As it turned out, it would have been useful only had I become stranded on the toll road or expressways closer to Chicago. Anything south of the Kankakee River was a dead zone (and remained that way till fairly recently), so had I been stranded on the country roads, I would have had a good, long, pregnant walk or a good, long wait until someone came along to help.TheCalvinator24 wrote:Cell phones become generally commercially viable? I don't remember many people having them until about '95.
I think I got my first cell phone in about 1993 as well. That was about when they started to seem affordable to me although I remember them being around from at least the late 80's. It was a "bag" phone rather than a more typical cell phone although those were available as well. Those cell phones were about the size of a large brick and weighed about as much! The bag phones were cheaper which is why I got that. It allowed me to go out and about when on call without having to search for a pay phone when I got paged on my beeper (remember beepers?!?!). They may have been more common at an early date in the medical community or other professions that were frequently "on call" for the convenience factor.Catfish wrote:In the summer of 1993---when I was pregnant, had moved to the country, but still had a 70-mile commute to Chicago---I had what I guess would be considered a cell phone, although it was about the size of a conventional phone receiver. It was a Motorola and had Verizon service. We got the phone lest I become stranded on the country roads. As it turned out, it would have been useful only had I become stranded on the toll road or expressways closer to Chicago. Anything south of the Kankakee River was a dead zone (and remained that way till fairly recently), so had I been stranded on the country roads, I would have had a good, long, pregnant walk or a good, long wait until someone came along to help.TheCalvinator24 wrote:Cell phones become generally commercially viable? I don't remember many people having them until about '95.
Yes! What I had was very similar to this.tanstaafl2 wrote:The Motorola "brick" cell phones that I remember at that time looked something like this: