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Stephen Fry on the Phone (Omnibus)

Stephen Fry explores the history of mobile phones. In the 1960s engineers dreamt up the idea of a cellular network. From 2011.

Stephen Fry traces the evolution of the mobile phone.

From hefty executive bricks requiring a separate briefcase for carrying the battery to the smart little devices complete with personal assistant we have today.

There are more mobile phones in the world than there are people on the planet: Stephen talks to the backroom boys who made it all possible and hears how the technology succeeded, in ways that the geeks had not necessarily intended.

He also meets the men who first dreamt of creating a cellular network. Back in the 1960s, two Bell Labs engineers in the US thought perhaps a maximum of 50,000 people might use a cellular phone network.

Now, there are billions of phones in the world, all of them dependent on the networks based on their design. It was an enormous technical challenge that took decades to complete; but the main problems were political.

Motorola, for example, argued that phone calls were a frivolous waste of radio spectrum compared to more worthy causes like television.

Omnibus of five episodes.

Producer: Anna Buckley

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in November 2011.

14 days left to listen

1 hour, 10 minutes

Last on

Mon 16 Mar 202602:30

Broadcasts

  • Sun 15 Mar 202607:30
  • Sun 15 Mar 202612:30
  • Sun 15 Mar 202618:30
  • Mon 16 Mar 202602:30