Mobile) Is The World's Most Popular Standard For Mobile Telephony Systems. The GSM

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GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications: originally from Groupe Spécial

Mobile) is the world's most popular standard for mobile telephony systems. The GSM
Association estimates that 80% of the global mobile market uses the standard. GSM is
used by over 1.5 billion people across more than 212 countries and territories. This
ubiquity means that subscribers can use their phones throughout the world, enabled by
international roaming arrangements between mobile network operators. GSM differs
from its predecessor technologies in that both signaling and speech channels are digital,
and thus GSM is considered a second generation (2G) mobile phone system. This also
facilitates the wide-spread implementation of data communication applications into the
system.

The GSM standard has been an advantage to both consumers, who may benefit from the
ability to roam and switch carriers without replacing phones, and also to network
operators, who can choose equipment from many GSM equipment vendors.GSM also
pioneered low-cost implementation of the short message service (SMS), also called text
messaging, which has since been supported on other mobile phone standards as well. The
standard includes a worldwide emergency telephone number feature (112).

Newer versions of the standard were backward-compatible with the original GSM
system. For example, Release '97 of the standard added packet data capabilities by means
of General Packet Radio Service (GPRS). Release '99 introduced higher speed data
transmission using Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution (EDGE).
Subscriber Identity Module (SIM)

One of the key features of GSM is the Subscriber Identity Module, commonly known as a
SIM card. The SIM is a detachable smart card containing the user's subscription
information and phone book. This allows the user to retain his or her information after
switching handsets. Alternatively, the user can also change operators while retaining the
handset simply by changing the SIM. Some operators will block this by allowing the
phone to use only a single SIM, or only a SIM issued by them; this practice is known as
SIM locking and is illegal in some countries.

Phone locking

Sometimes mobile network operators restrict handsets that they sell for use with their
own network. This is called locking and is implemented by a software feature of the
phone. Because the purchase price of the mobile phone to the consumer is typically
subsidized with revenue from subscriptions, operators must recoup this investment before
a subscriber terminates service. A subscriber may usually contact the provider to remove
the lock for a fee, utilize private services to remove the lock, or make use of free or fee-
based software and websites to unlock the handset themselves.

In some territories (e.g., Bangladesh, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Singapore)
all phones are sold unlocked. In others (e.g., Finland, Singapore) it is unlawful for
operators to offer any form of subsidy on a phone's price.

History

In 1982, the [European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations]


(CEPT) created the Groupe Spécial Mobile (GSM) to develop a standard for a mobile
telephone system that could be used across Europe. In 1987, a memorandum of
understanding was signed by 13 countries to develop a common cellular telephone
system across Europe. In 1989, GSM responsibility was transferred to the European
Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and phase I of the GSM specifications
were published in 1990. The first GSM network was launched in 1991 by Radiolinja in
Finland with joint technical infrastructure maintenance from Ericsson. By the end of
1993, over a million subscribers were using GSM phone networks being operated by 70
carriers across 48 countries.

Code division multiple access (CDMA) is a channel access method used by various
radio communication technologies. It should not be confused with the mobile phone
standards called cdmaOne and CDMA2000 (which are often referred to as simply
CDMA), which use CDMA as an underlying channel access method.
One of the basic concepts in data communication is the idea of allowing several
transmitters to send information simultaneously over a single communication channel.
This allows several users to share a band of frequencies (see bandwidth). This concept is
called Multiple Access. CDMA employs spread-spectrum technology and a special
coding scheme (where each transmitter is assigned a code) to allow multiple users to be
multiplexed over the same physical channel. By contrast, time division multiple access
(TDMA) divides access by time, while frequency-division multiple access (FDMA)
divides it by frequency. CDMA is a form of spread-spectrum signaling, since the
modulated coded signal has a much higher data bandwidth than the data being
communicated.

An analogy to the problem of multiple access is a room (channel) in which people wish to
talk to each other simultaneously. To avoid confusion, people could take turns speaking
(time division), speak at different pitches (frequency division), or speak in different
languages (code division). CDMA is analogous to the last example where people
speaking the same language can understand each other, but other languages are perceived
as noise and rejected. Similarly, in radio CDMA, each group of users is given a shared
code. Many codes occupy the same channel, but only users associated with a particular
code can communicate.

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