Thursday, June 21, 2007

History of Second - Generation (2G) systems (continued)

GSM

During the early 1980s, analog cellular telephone systems were experiencing rapid growth in Europe, particularly in Scandinavia and the United Kingdom, but also in France and Germany. Each country developed its own system, which was incompatible with everyone else's in equipment and operation. This was an undesirable situation, because not only was the mobile equipment limited to operation within national boundaries, which in a unified Europe were increasingly unimportant, but there was also a very limited market for each type of equipment, so economies of scale and the subsequent savings could not be realized.

The Europeans realized this early on, and in 1982 the Conference of European Posts and Telegraphs (CEPT) formed a study group called the Groupe Spécial Mobile (GSM) to study and develop a pan-European public land mobile system. The proposed system had to meet certain criteria:
  • Good subjective speech quality

  • Low terminal and service cost

  • Support for international roaming

  • Ability to support handheld terminals

  • Support for range of new services and facilities

  • Spectral efficiency

  • ISDN compatibility


In 1989, GSM responsibility was transferred to the European Telecommunication Standards Institute (ETSI), and phase I of the GSM specifications were published in 1990. Commercial service was started in mid-1991, and by 1993 there were 36 GSM networks in 22 countries. Although standardized in Europe, GSM is not only a European standard. Over 200 GSM networks (including DCS1800 and PCS1900) are operational in 110 countries around the world. In the beginning of 1994, there were 1.3 million subscribers worldwide , which had grown to more than 55 million by October 1997. With North America making a delayed entry into the GSM field with a derivative of GSM called PCS1900, GSM systems exist on every continent, and the acronym GSM now aptly stands for Global System for Mobile communications.

Initially, GSM was specified to operate only in the 900-MHz band, and most of the GSM networks in service use this band. There are, however, other frequency bands used by GSM technology. The first implementation of GSM at a different frequency happened in the United Kingdom in 1993. That service was initially known as DCS1800 since it operates in the 1800-MHz band. These days, however, it is known as GSM1800. After all, it really is just GSM operating at 1800 MHz.




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