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103 lines
5.7 KiB
Text
103 lines
5.7 KiB
Text
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==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume One, Issue Six, Phile 7 of 13
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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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Cellular Telephones
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[Written By The High Evolutionary]
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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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I assume that most of us know many of the technical aspects of Cellular
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Phreaking therefore this file is intended for general information as to how
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these unique devices operate.
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--------------------------------------------------------------
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Cellular is likely to be successful because it provides dramatic
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improvements over the historic automobile phones. For years, mobile
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radio-telephone service was an extremely limited proposition. There were only
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forty-four radio channels available, and a maximum of about thirty were
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assigned to any one area. That meant if all thirty channels were occupied-one
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conversation per channel-and you were the thirty-first mobile phone user who
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wished to make a call, you would have to wait thirty minutes or more, even in a
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city the size of New York. As you can imagine, mobile radio-telephone service
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like that could not become very popular. Even with the limited number of
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channels, long delays in making calls during busy periods, and often poor
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quality transmission, there were big waiting lists for mobile service. But
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with a fully equipped cellular radio-telephone system, it is possible to make
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5000 times as many calls simultaneously in the same metropolitan area, opening
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up the service to anyone that can pay the hefty prices.
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That is because cellular radio-telephones systems are technically quite
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different from traditional mobile telephones. First, the FCC (Federal
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Communications Commission) has allocated far more channels to cellular, 666 in
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all. Second, those 666 channels are broadcast from many different locations.
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In the old mobile telephone systems, there was one powerful radio station with
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a large antenna that served an entire city. In the new system, a geographical
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area is honeycombed with many cells, hence the name 'Cellular'. Each cell has
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its own low-powered radio transmitter and receiver. As a car with a cellular
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telephone or a person carrying a portable moves from one cell to the next, the
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call is transferred automatically. You're unlikely to notice when this
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transfer takes place, even though your phone is suddenly switched to a
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different radio station and to another channel while you are talking.
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Because the cellular signal is low-powered, it doesn't go very far. This
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permits the same channel you are talking on to be used for calls in other parts
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of the same metropolitan area without interference. This would mean cellular
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radio-telephone systems can serve a very large number of customers in an area
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because there are more channels than before-and the larger number of channels
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are reused.
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Unlike local telephone service, which is provided by a monopoly, there is
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competition in cellular. Two classes of companies are allowed to offer
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cellular telephone service in every market. One cellular system can be owned
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by a telephone company, the other by someone else. The two-company rule was
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adopted by the FCC so that AT&T, which developed cellular, could not monopolize
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the whole thing.
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Cellular Telephones come in two basic versions, as car phones and portable
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phones, with a briefcase hybrid. Car phones are by far the most common,
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because they are much cheaper. But most believe that, ultimately, portables
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will be the most popular. Washington Post Company president Richard Simmons,
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whose company is a partner in several cellular systems, even predicts that by
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the early 1990's "There will be phones roughly the size of a calculators that
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you carry around in your pocket. They will cost no more than five hundred
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dollars. They will emancipate people from the necessity of locating a phone to
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make calls. The bad news is, you will never be able to get away from the phone,
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and we'll call it progress."
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Car telephones include a small transmitter-receiver unit that is usually
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mounted in the trunk, an antenna and a control head that includes the handset.
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In most cellular systems, the telephone touchpad is located on the handset.
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Many domestic and foreign manufacturers make cellular car phones, but so far
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only Motorola makes portables, the DYNA T-A-C 8000X and 8000S. Motorola's
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portables look like a slightly enlarged, somewhat chunky telephone handset,
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with a stubby antenna at one end.
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Portables are less powerful than car units, so they can't be used with some
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cellular systems. The portable's other limitation is battery life. A portable
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can listen for calls for about eight hours, but it can only transmit for only
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thirty minutes. After that time it must be charged for a minimum of an hour.
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The following American cities have cellular telephone service or soon will
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get it:
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New York Denver
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Los Angeles Seattle
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Chicago Milwaukee
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Philadelphia Tampa
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Detroit Cincinnati
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Boston Kansas City
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San Francisco Buffalo
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Washington Phoenix
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Dallas San Jose
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Houston Indianapolis
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St. Louis New Orleans
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Miami Portland
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Pittsburgh Cleveland
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San Diego Atlanta
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Baltimore Minneapolis
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