Everything about Wireless Modem totally explained
Mobile phones can be employed as data modems to form a wireless access point connecting a personal computer to the Internet (or some proprietary
network). In this use the mobile phone is providing a
gateway between the cellular service provider's data network technology and Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) spoken by PCs. Almost all current mobile phone models support the
Hayes command set, a standard method of controlling modems. To the PC, the phone appears like an external modem when connected via serial cable,
USB,
IrDA infrared or
Bluetooth wireless.
Wireless data modems are also used in the
Wi-Fi and
WiMAX standards, operating at microwave frequencies, to give a laptop,
PDA or desktop computer an access point to a network. If combined with
VoIP technology, these computing devices can achieve telephony capability to make and receive telephone calls.
History
While some
analogue mobile phones provided a standard
RJ11 telephone socket into which a normal landline modem could be plugged, this only provided slow
dial-up connections, usually 2.4 kilobit per second (kbit/s) or less. The next generation of phones, known as 2G (for 'second generation'), were digital, and offered faster dial-up speeds of 9.6kbit/s or 14.4kbit/s without the need for a separate modem. A further evolution called HSCSD used multiple GSM channels (two or three in each direction) to support up to 43.2kbit/s. All of these technologies still required their users to have a dial-up
ISP to connect to and provide the Internet access - it wasn't provided by the mobile phone network itself.
The release of
2.5G phones with support for
packet data changed this. The 2.5G networks break both digital voice and data into small chunks, and mix both onto the network simultaneously in a process called
packet switching. This allows the phone to have a voice connection and a data connection at the same time, rather than a single channel that has to be used for one or the other. The network can link the data connection into a company network, but for most users the connection is to the Internet. This allows web browsing on the phone, but a PC can also tap in to this service if it connects to the phone. The PC needs to send a special telephone number to the phone to get access to the packet data connection. From the PC's viewpoint, the connection still looks like a normal PPP dial-up link, but it's all terminating on the phone, which then handles the exchange of data with the network. Speeds on 2.5G networks are usually in the 30-50kbit/s range.
3G networks have taken this approach to a higher level, using different underlying technology but the same principles. They routinely provide speeds over 300kbit/s. A further evolution is the
3.5G technology
HSDPA, which has the capacity to provide speeds of multiple
Megabits per second.
Service Providers
There are competing
common carriers
broadcasting signal in most nations of the earth.
Some of these
Cellular networks and the carrier's service plans are:
North America
United States providers
Europe
United Kingdom providers
Spanish providers:
India providers
Oceania
Australia providers
Device Manufacturers
Danger
Freewave Technologies
HTC (includes Qtek and Dopod)
Hewlett Packard (HP)
Huawei
LG Electronics
Motorola
Nokia
Novatel Wireless
Panasonic
RIM (BlackBerry)
Samsung
Sony Ericsson
Qualcomm
Technologies
GPRS (2.5G)
CDMA
EDGE
UMTS (3G)
GPRS Core Network
IP Multimedia Subsystem
HSDPA (3.5G)Further Information
Get more info on 'Wireless Modem'.
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