Yes, boys and girls, my first cell phone came in a lunchbox (does anyone under 40 even know what THAT means?) sized nylon ‘case’. It required an external power source (cigarette lighter plug) and an external antenna.
I have fond memories of dropped calls whenever I crossed a state line (pre-roaming) and per-minute charges approaching today’s gas prices.
Back in the fabulous 80’s AMPS was the technology in use for all cell phone networks in the US. Technology has marched on and AMPS has fallen into the same category as floppy disks and carbon paper. The two carriers with remaining AMPS coverage are scheduled to de-activate their networks next week.
The vast majority of folks won’t notice; we’ve since moved on to GSM and/or UMTS networks. However, there are still a goodly number of devices using this technology, namely alarm systems, older GM OnStar systems and ‘remote monitoring’.
If you’re alarm system has a cellular back-up option, or you have an old GM a bit of investigation would be prudent. GM has an info page up here.
Can you hear me now? Analog cellular networks shutting down next week
Wireless disruption | Santa Rosa Press Democrat // News for California’s North Bay and Redwood Empire