|
 |
 |
 |
1X or 1XRTT
A high speed data protocol that is used with CDMA phones and devices for
wireless internet.
Airtime
Actual time spent talking on your cellular telephone. In general most cellular
phone companies charge you from the time you hit the SEND button until you hit
the END button (i.e., you pay to listen to a ringing signal, but only if someone
answers). GSM phone companies generally charge actual talk time and not time
listening to ringing signals. You are not charged for listening to busy signals
or if your call is not answered.
AMPS
Advanced Mobile Phone Service; commonly known as analog cellular that uses the
800 MHz spectrum. AMPS service has been available in North America since the mid
80's and it is also available in Central and South America. AMPS is quickly
being phased out as more energy is needed to make and monitor for calls from a
handset plus providers rather use the newer digital technologies that allow them
to squeeze several callers onto one channel.
Base Station
A transmission and reception station for handling cellular traffic. Usually
consists of one or more receive/transmit antenna, microwave dish, and electronic
circuitry. Also referred to as a cell site, since it holds one or more tx/rx
cells. Base stations are constructed and placed on high buildings, hydro towers,
monopoles, or other structures with a good elevation above the area to be
covered. Several base stations within an area form a wireless network.
BlueTooth
Bluetooth is a specification for providing links between mobile computers,
mobile phones and other portable handheld devices, and connectivity to the
Internet. It enables users to connect a wide range of computing and
telecommunications devices easily and simply without the need to buy, carry, or
connect cables.
CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access. One of the newer digital technologies in use in
Canada, the US, Australia, and some southeastern Asian countries (e.g. Hong Kong
and South Korea). CDMA differs from GSM and TDMA by its use of spread spectrum
techniques for transmitting voice or data over the air. Rather than dividing the
radio frequency spectrum into separate user channels by frequency slices or time
slots, spread spectrum technology separates users by assigning them digital
codes within the same broad spectrum. Advantages of CDMA include higher user
capacity and immunity from interference by other signals. Available in either
800 or 1900 MHz frequencies.
Cell
The basic geographic unit of a cellular system and the basis for the generic
industry term "cellular." A city is divided into small "cells", each of which is
equipped with a low-powered radio transmitter/receiver or base station. The
cells can vary in size depending on terrain and capacity demands. By controlling
the transmission power and the radio frequencies assigned from one cell to
another, a computer at the MTSO monitors the movement and transfers or hands off
the phone call to another cell and another radio frequency as needed.
Codec
Short for "compressor/decompressor"; refers to the hardware in a cell phone and
in the cell network that compresses digitized voice prior to transmission AND
takes received compressed voice and decompresses it prior to passing it to
either a cell phone speaker or into a wireline system. Codec allows the cell
network to essentially pass a lot of data in compressed form to permit
additional users on the system and to save bandwidth. The idea behind codec is
that human voices are highly lossy and a significant amount of the conversation
can be removed since human ears can fill in the removed gaps at the other end.
Each technology has different codec algorithms -- for CDMA there is 13K and 8K.
Control Channel
A channel used for transmission of digital control information from a base
station to a cellular phone (forward control channel) or from a cellular phone
to a base station (reverse control channel).
Dual Band
Dual band phones are capable of using two different frequencies of the same
technologies. For example a TDMA or CDMA phone that can use either the 800 or
1900 MHz band. There are also Triple Band phones in the GSM market that support
900, 1800, and 1900 MHz. Dual band phones allow you to access different
frequencies in the same or different geographic regions, essentially giving your
phone a wider coverage area.
Dual Mode
Dual mode phones that support more that one technology. For example a 800 MHz
CDMA phone that also supports 800 MHz AMPS. You can also have phones that
support dual band/dual mode such as the Nokia 6185 which is 800, 1900 MHz CDMA
and 800 MHz AMPS. Dual mode phones allow you to access different technologies in
the same or different geographic regions, essentially giving your phone a wider
coverage area.
ESN
Each cellular phone is assigned an unique ESN or Electronic Serial Number, which
is automatically transmitted to the cellular base station every time a call is
placed. The MTSO validates the ESN with each call. Cloned cellular phones
transmit a stolen ESN and charges are made to the real cellular phone account.
Frequency reuse
The ability to use the same frequencies repeatedly across a cellular system,
made possible by the basic design approach for cellular. Since each cell is
designed to use radio frequencies only within its boundaries, the same
frequencies can be reused in other cells not far away with little potential for
interference. The reuse of frequencies is what enables a cellular system to
handle a huge number of calls with a limited number of channels.
GSM
Global System for Mobile communications. The most common digital cellular system
in the world. GSM is used all over Europe, plus many countries in the Middle
East, Asia, Africa, South America, Australia, and North America. GSM's air
interface is based on narrowband TDMA technology, where available frequency
bands are divided into time slots, with each user having access to one time slot
at regular intervals. Narrow band TDMA allows eight simultaneous communications
on a single radio multiplexor and is designed to support 16 half-rate channels.
GSM also is the only technology that provides incoming and outgoing data
services, such as email, fax, and internet surfing. GSM makes use of a SIM card
that allows memory portability between dumb GSM phones.
GPRS
General Packet Radio Service, a technology associated with GSM phones that
allows faster speeds of data transmission.
Handoff
The process by which the MTSO passes a cellular phone conversation from one
radio frequency in one cell to another radio frequency in another. The handoff
is performed so quickly that users usually never notice.
Hertz
A unit for expressing frequency which is the number of times a wave-like radio
signal changes from maximum positive to maximum negative and then back to
maximum positive again. 1 Hz = 1 cycle per second. 1 kilohertz (kHz) = 1,000 Hz;
1 megahertz (MHz) = 1,000 kHz or 1,000,000 Hz; 1 gigahertz (GHz) = 1,000 MHz or
1 million kHz or 1 billion Hz. AMPS (analog) cellular phones in Canada and the
US use the 800 MHz band. Digital phones use either the 800 MHz or 1900 MHz (or
1.9 GHz) frequencies. Specifically, CDMA and TDMA use either 800 or 1900 MHz;
iDEN uses only 800 MHz; GSM uses either the 850 or the 1900 MHz spectrum in
North America. GSM uses 900, 1800, and/or 1900 MHz on other continents.
iDEN
A modified TDMA technology used by Motorola. iDEN phones operate at 800 MHz and
are offered by Telus Mobility in Canada and by Nextel in the US. Some of the
newer iDEN phones also are hybrid with GSM technology and may roam overseas.
MTSO
Mobile Telephone Switching Office. The central switch that controls the entire
operation of a cellular system. It is a sophisticated computer that monitors all
cellular calls, tracks the location of all cellular-equipped vehicles traveling
in the system, arranges handoffs, keeps track of billing information, etc.
NAM
The NAM or Number Assignment Module is the electronic memory in the cellular
phone that stores the telephone number. Phones with dual- or multi-NAM features
offer users the option of registering the phone with a local number in more than
one market.
Paging
The act of seeking a cellular phone when an incoming call is trying to reach the
phone.
PCS
Personal Communication Services. Essentially the same as cellular, but
indicating a digital phone. See this FAQ for a more detailed description.
PRL
Referred Roaming List. A list of SID's kept inside a phone to permit roaming on
other wireless networks. A service provider may set up roaming agreements with
other service providers in different geographic regions and the PRL will try to
locate one of these service providers' networks first when the home service
provider is unavailable. PRL's do change so it's a good idea to ask for a PRL
upgrade every 6 months or so if you do a lot of roaming outside your home
service area.
Registration
The procedure that a cellular phone initiates to a base station to indicate that
it is now active.
Roaming
The ability to use your cellular phone outside your providers' home service
area. Providers often set up Roaming Agreements with other providers in
different geographic locations. A roaming agreement lets you seemlessly make
calls in the other provider's geographic service area without operator
intervention. Roaming agreements save customers money and time. Airtime incurred
while roaming shows up on your monthly statement as an additional charge, unless
your monthly plan includes roaming. Roaming is never as cheap as your home
airtime rates, but is provided as a short-term convience for a provider's
customers. Sometimes a roaming agreement may not be in place and operator
intervention is required to obtain a credit card number. This is usually much
more expensive than a roaming agreement (up to $5/min compared to $1/min).
SID
System Identification. A five digit number that indicates which service area the
phone is in. Most carriers have one SID assigned to their service area.
SIM card
A small memory card not much bigger than half the length of your thumb. Used in
GSM phones to hold your phone numbers and other information. Can be removed and
inserted into other GSM phones, allowing you to keep your numbers and to place
and receive phone calls.
SMS
Short Message Service. A method of delivering a short (120-200 character)
message to your digital cellular phone. GSM phones can also send SMS. A nice way
to send a short message to someone without calling them. Private SMS services
include weather and sports reports, stock quotes, and more. Usually people can
either visit a SMS web page and type a short message which is sent to your phone
or email your phone (e.g., 2509999999@telusmobilty.com). Some providers change
additional monthly fees for the reception or transmission of SMS.
SP-lock
A lock placed on a cellular phone by some service providers to ensure that you
can only use the phone with their services.
Standby time
The amount of time you can leave your fully charged cellular phone turned on
before the phone will completely discharge the batteries.
Talk time
The length of time you can talk on your cellular phone without recharging the
battery. The battery capacity of a cellular phone is usually expressed in terms
of so many minutes of talk time OR so many hours of standby time. When you're
talking, the phone draws additional power from the battery.
TDMA
Time Division Multiple Access. TDMA divides frequency bands available to the
network into time slots, with each user having access to one time slot at
regular intervals. TDMA thereby makes more efficient use of available bandwidth
than the previous generation AMPS technology. Available in either 800 or 1900
MHz frequencies.
2G
The most common type of phone in North America today. 2G phones deliver both
voice and data transmissions, but primarily focus on voice communications. Data
connections using the wireless phone are similar to dial-up connections using a
older modem and speeds are quite slow. Okay for simple text messages (SMS) and
email, but not much else.
2.5G
An intermediate standard between 2G and 3G phones. 2G phones are purely digital
and can transmit wireless data at about the same rate as a dial-up connection
with a fast modem. Good for email and simple web browsing.
3G
A third-generation high-speed mobile phone that will eventually provide data at
rates similar to cable or ADSL. At present, very limited availability and data
transfer speeds are limited to about 144 Kbps.
Voice Channel
A channel used for transmission of voice data from a base station to a cellular
phone (forward voice channel) or from a cellular phone to a base station
(reverse voice channel)
WAP
Wireless Application Protocol. A standard for web sites and information services
to deliver simple web page layouts to mobile phones.
Wireless Data
A service that allows you to send digital data over a cellular phone. Analog
phones require a cellular modem; digital phones do not. Not offered by all
providers.
Up | Down | Top | Bottom
|
 |
|