Tweet This! :)

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Carterfone ruling opens phone network to competition

@Mark Ollig


The 1968 Carterfone decision was an important event in telephone history, but it is often mistakenly associated with President Jimmy Carter.

It is actually named after Thomas F. Carter, an inventor from Texas, who invented a device which acoustically interfaces with a telephone called the Carterfone.

The FCC changed the AT&T Bell System’s phone company rules May 16, 1957, known as tariffs, in response to the 1956 Hush-A-Phone Corp. v. United States decision.

This decision allowed customers to use a small plastic Hush-A-Phone cup, invented by Harry C. Tuttle, to reduce noise and improve privacy on their telephones, provided it didn’t harm the network.

Following this case, the Bell System was required to permit such mechanical attachments.

However, AT&T’s rules still banned most other “foreign attachments,” especially electrical connections not provided by the company, including the Carterfone, from being used on the national telephone network.

In 1959, Thomas F. Carter invented the Carterfone, an acoustic coupler that allowed two-way radios to connect to the public telephone network without any electrical link to the Bell System.

The Carterfone’s base unit, about the size of a shoebox, connected by wire to a separate remote speaker used for monitoring and volume control.

A standard Bell telephone handset rested in the Carterfone cradle, its receiver and transmitter seated in paired rubber cups.

Inside the base were a small microphone, audio circuitry, and a voice-activated switch.

The FCC opinion later described this as a “voice control circuit” that keyed the radio transmitter when the telephone caller spoke.

In a typical setup, the mobile vehicle carried a standard two-way radio, and the base office had the matching base-station radio, a Bell telephone on a POTS line, and the Carterfone.

When a driver needed to reach someone on the telephone network, they first called the dispatcher over the mobile radio.

The dispatcher answered on the base-station radio, lifted the telephone handset, and placed it into the Carterfone’s rubber cups, and dialed the destination number.

On the telephone side, the caller’s voice traveled over the copper POTS line to the handset.

Sound from the handset’s receiver entered the Carterfone’s rubber cup, where the microphone and voice-activated circuit detected it and keyed the base-station radio transmitter.

This sent the audio out over the two-way radio channel to the driver.

The return audio followed the opposite path.

When the driver spoke into the vehicle’s radio microphone, the mobile radio carried the sound back to the base-station radio, which fed it through a cable to the Carterfone’s separate speaker.

That speaker directed the sound into the rubber cup at the telephone mouthpiece, allowing the distant party on the POTS line to hear the driver’s voice, still without any direct electrical connection to the Bell System.

The Carterfone used electrical connections only on the radio side, while the telephone side operated purely through sound.

This acoustical arrangement enabled two-way radios to be linked to the public telephone network without touching the Bell System’s wiring.

AT&T would not allow the Carterfone to connect to its network, calling it a foreign attachment under its rule that allowed the company to cut off service to any device not supplied by them.

As a result, AT&T could disconnect customers who used the Carterfone, even when it was providing vital service in remote areas.

Facing restrictions that threatened his business, Thomas F. Carter and Carter Electronics Corporation sued AT&T Nov. 29, 1965, in the US District Court for the Northern District of Texas.

Carter argued in his antitrust suit that AT&T used its tariffs to control which devices could connect to the network.

The federal court then referred the tariff issue to the FCC for review.

In August 1966, the Fifth Circuit upheld that referral, and the FCC proceeded with a formal investigation.

Carter filed a complaint under the Communications Act Dec. 21, 1966, claiming the tariff restricted trade.

During hearings in 1967, AT&T said its tariff rule was needed for safety, but Carter and others argued it was anti-competitive.

The FCC determined June 26, 1968, that AT&T’s tariffs were unlawful, allowing customers to connect their own devices provided they did not harm the network.

The Minneapolis Tribune reported June 28, 1968, that the FCC voted six to zero to overturn the rule allowing phone companies to block customer attachments.

The ruling ended AT&T’s de facto equipment monopoly and opened the door to competition in the sale of telephones, modems, answering machines, and business telecommunication systems.

A Minneapolis Tribune story on March 11, 1969, reported that Data Communications Systems, Inc., of Columbia Heights had completed its acquisition of Carterfone Communications Corporation of Dallas, TX.

The Carterfone decision pushed back against AT&T’s control over customer equipment.

In response, the company updated its tariffs to require any customer-owned devices to connect through a Bell-owned Protective Connecting Arrangement (PCA) box.

This was a physical interface installed by the Bell Telephone Company between their wiring and the customer’s equipment, with every device wired through it.

Similar to the later network interface device (NID), the PCA marked the handoff point between customer and company, but unlike the NID, which gave customers direct access to their inside wiring, the PCA kept that wiring entirely under Bell’s control.

Because it sat at the handoff point and was off-limits to customers, it restricted their access to their own wiring and limited many of the benefits promised by the Carterfone ruling.

In 1975, the FCC established Part 68 rules in Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations for connecting customer-owned equipment to the telephone network.

These rules helped pave the way for the NID, which telephone companies increasingly installed on the outside of buildings after the 1984 breakup of the Bell System, as the handoff demarcation point between their wiring and the customer’s wiring.

These rules replaced the PCA requirement and defined “harm” as hazards to staff, damage to network equipment, billing issues, or degraded service.

The FCC set national standards and introduced a registration program, enabling phone companies to block harmful devices.

This change enabled connecting non-Bell devices, such as consumer telephones, answering machines, modems, and business phone systems, via standardized modular connectors known as registered jack (RJ) connectors.

Among these, RJ11 emerged as the standard modular jack used with single-line telephones.

Part 68 promoted a competitive market by allowing consumers to purchase phones and other equipment from various manufacturers, effectively ending the equipment monopoly held by AT&T and its manufacturing division, Western Electric.

Thomas F. Carter passed away Feb. 23, 1991, at 67.

Today, a Carterfone is on display at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History as part of its telecommunications collection.



Thursday, November 20, 2025

‘Secret Communication System’ truly ahead of its time

@Mark Ollig

Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr and American composer George Antheil filed a US patent application June 10, 1941, Serial No. 397,412, titled “Secret Communication System.”

Issued as US Patent No. 2,292,387 Aug. 11, 1942, during the height of World War II, their invention described a system designed to make radio communications difficult to discover or decipher.

On the patent, Lamarr was listed as Hedy Kiesler Markey, her legal name at the time, which blended her maiden surname with her married name.

They proposed a frequency-hopping system in which the transmitter and receiver switched in sync among as many as 88 preset frequencies.

This rapid, synchronized hopping, with both ends changing in the same order at the same time, kept their link in step and, in principle, would make the intended torpedo control signals much harder to jam or intercept.

The patent states, “This invention relates broadly to secret communication systems involving the use of carrier waves of different frequencies, and is especially useful in the remote control of dirigible craft, such as torpedoes.”

It continues, “An object of the invention is to provide a method of secret communication which is relatively simple and reliable in operation, but at the same time is difficult to discover or decipher.”

As a child in Vienna, Lamarr’s father taught her about machines, such as streetcars and printing presses, which sparked her technical interest in inventing and solving problems.

While still in her teens, Lamarr studied acting in Vienna and caught the attention of pioneering theater director Max Reinhardt, who helped launch her professional stage and film career.

In 1933, Lamarr married industrialist Fritz Mandl, attending his meetings with scientists and defense experts, where she gained knowledge about weapons and radio technology, including how jamming could disrupt radio connections.

In 1937, just before World War II erupted in Europe, she met Louis B. Mayer in London.

He was the head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), a Hollywood studio based in Culver City, CA, known for its high-quality films and roster of major stars.

She accepted an MGM contract during the ocean voyage to the United States and then moved to Hollywood to begin her new career under the stage name Hedy Lamarr.

Hedy Lamarr starred in films like “Algiers” (1938), “Ziegfeld Girl” (1941), and “Samson and Delilah” (1949).

During her movie career, she became interested in a specific wartime issue: how to keep enemy forces from jamming the radio signals used to guide Allied radio-controlled torpedoes.

In 1940, while war raged in Europe and the United States had not yet entered the conflict, Lamarr met composer George Antheil at a Hollywood dinner party.

She was quoted as having discussed her discomfort with making money while Europe was in crisis.
Lamarr and Antheil’s later conversations turned to the use of radio control and jamming techniques, which led to a design for protecting radio-guided torpedoes from interference.

As World War II unfolded in Europe, they worked together on a frequency-hopping control method to counter Axis jamming of Allied radio-guided torpedoes.

Antheil, a pioneering composer, explored the idea of syncing several player pianos playing simultaneously via perforated paper rolls during his live performances.

His most famous work, Ballet Mécanique, was originally scored for 16 synchronized player pianos.

That work gave him a practical sense of timing, coordination, and expertise to control multiple machines simultaneously.

He drew on that experience when he helped Lamarr design the patent’s synchronization mechanism for the frequency-hopping system, using as many as 88 preset frequencies, matching the 88 keys on a piano keyboard.

Lamarr and Antheil developed a method to rapidly switch between preset radio frequencies, with only the sender and receiver aware of the pattern.

Their idea used matching perforated paper rolls in both the transmitter and receiver, each programmed with the same hopping sequence, a preset pattern of frequency changes, ensuring both sides remained in step as the radio frequency changed.

As the rolls moved forward together, the connection stayed in sync even as the carrier frequency changed.

This coordinated hopping pattern is often cited as an early analog example of what is now known as spread-spectrum signaling, a concept that later engineers adapted into electronic and digital forms.

The Navy rejected it in 1942 because the paper-roll synchronization mechanism was too cumbersome for a torpedo.

It is also clear to me that the vacuum-tube electronics of that era would have added unnecessary size and complexity to any practical version of their device meant for use inside a torpedo.

Lamarr and Antheil’s patent was granted during World War II, but it wasn’t until transistor technology emerged in the 1950s that their idea became practical for use in compact electronic devices.

In 1957, during the Cold War, as solid-state electronics progressed, engineers at Sylvania explored developing a version of Lamarr and Antheil’s patented system using solid-state transistors.

In the following years, as new technologies matured, the military began implementing spread-spectrum and frequency-hopping techniques.

The development of spread-spectrum and frequency-hopping technologies paved the way for Bluetooth, invented in 1994, which uses frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) in the 2.4 gigahertz band to reduce interference.

The Global Positioning System (GPS), which became fully operational in the mid-1990s, also uses direct-sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) for improved signal reception.

The first Wi-Fi standard, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.11 specification, released in 1997, employed methods such as frequency hopping and DSSS.

In 1999, IEEE 802.11a introduced orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) in the 5 gigahertz band for faster data rates.

This evolution of wireless standards continues to this day.

As of this year, Wi-Fi 6 (using the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands) and Wi-Fi 6E (which adds the 6 GHz band) are commonly found in new routers, offering maximum theoretical speeds of approximately 9.6 Gbps.

Also, Wi-Fi 7 (IEEE 802.11be) is now available in high-end devices, offering multi-gigabit speeds with peak data rates of around 40 Gbps under optimal conditions.

Lamarr and Antheil’s collaboration played a key role in shaping the “truly ahead of its time” wireless technologies we rely on today.

George Johann Carl Antheil was born July 8, 1900, in Trenton, NJ, and died Feb. 12, 1959, in New York City, NY, at age 58.

Hedy Lamarr, born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler Nov. 9, 1914, in Vienna, Austria, died Jan. 19, 2000, in Casselberry, FL, at age 85.

















Thursday, November 13, 2025

AI helps retired telecom tech

@Mark Ollig

The other evening, I turned on my LG smart TV and opened the YouTube TV app to watch some live-streaming channels.

Lately, the video had been a bit blurry and choppy.

That night, it froze after about a minute, and all I saw was a spinning icon circle; it felt like seeing the Windows “blue screen of death.”

I could hear “Star Trek’s” Dr. Leonard McCoy saying, “The YouTube TV app is dead, Jim.”

As a retired telecom engineer, I used to resolve complex hardware and call routing problems involving multimillion-dollar digital and optical signaling network systems.

Before retirement, I diagnosed issues in Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) switching environments.

But there I was, in my living room, staring at a frozen YouTube TV video stream.

My other smart TV apps, Netflix, Prime Video, and Paramount+, all worked fine.

I also verified that the YouTube TV app played smoothly on my Hewlett-Packard laptop, my Google Assistant smart display, and my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

All devices were connected, including my smart TV, via Wi-Fi through a wireless local area network (WLAN) on my Verizon 5G Home Internet gateway, the router in my home.

Since I have written about artificial intelligence (AI), I asked ChatGPT-5 from OpenAI for assistance.

I typed out the problem, listed what I had tried, and uploaded photos from the LG manual, the smart TV model label, the LG remote, and the on-screen messages I was seeing.

ChatGPT identified a likely adaptive bitrate (ABR) representation switch issue in the YouTube TV app’s webOS media player.

LG’s webOS is a Linux-based operating system.

When the app tried to improve video quality on my smart TV, it likely switched to a higher-bitrate segment of the same codec at a keyframe, known as an Instantaneous Decoder Refresh (IDR) frame.

Most video frames store only changes from prior frames, but a keyframe contains the complete picture.

When the video player encounters an IDR keyframe during an adaptive-bitrate (ABR) switch, it can discard older data, reset the decoder, and start again from that point without visual glitches or interruptions.

At that moment, the TV’s video pipeline should clear any buffered video data and reset the decoder. It should then load the next segment and continue playing.

A recent update to webOS or the YouTube TV app may have caused the playback issue, as the app froze during an adaptive-bitrate (ABR) transition because the reset did not complete.

And yes, I had deleted and reinstalled the YouTube TV app and reset the smart TV, but this did not immediately resolve the problem.

After completing a clean reinstall and full power reset, the newly installed app replaced the previous install, which a background update likely left in a bad state.

Reinstalling cleared cached files and settings, and the power reset cleared the TV’s memory and video decoder.

With a clean start, the player pulled a fresh playlist, picked a stable bitrate, and the video resumed.
The channels on the YouTube TV app played smoothly again on my LG smart TV.

Video playback for the YouTube TV app has been stable at high definition (HD) 720p and 60 frames per second (fps).

The smart TV is now set to auto update, which lets webOS refresh the system software and individual apps automatically.

I did some research on the history of smart TVs, with a focus on LG and its operating system, webOS.

Released in 2008, Samsung’s Series 7 (PAVV Bordeaux 750) was among the earliest connected TVs.

In 2009, Samsung added Yahoo-powered Internet@TV widgets (news, weather, stock) on select models.

It was the forerunner to today’s smart TVs.

Samsung introduced its Yahoo-powered “Internet@TV” widgets in 2009 on select models, offering on-screen apps like weather, news, and videos.

Google introduced Google TV, a smart TV platform, in May 2010.

“We want to use the internet to change the television experience. We’re putting a browser in the TV to enable a whole bunch of things,” said Vincent Dureau, Google’s head of TV technology, in the Aug. 19, 2010, Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Sony introduced the first high-definition TVs (HDTVs) powered by Google TV in October 2010.

LG’s history began in 1947 with the founding of Lucky Chemical Industrial Corporation by Koo In-hwoi (1907 to 1969).

In 1958, 11 years after founding his first company, In-hwoi started GoldStar Co., Ltd., marking his entry into the electronics industry.

For many years, Lucky Chemical focused on chemicals, while GoldStar focused on electronics.

In 1983, the parent company officially adopted the name Lucky-Goldstar, bringing Lucky Chemical and GoldStar together under one brand, now known as LG.

In 2009, Palm developed webOS, a Linux-based operating system, in Sunnyvale, CA. Hewlett-Packard acquired Palm in 2010 for $1.2 billion.

LG’s early NetCast smart TVs gained popularity by 2009, and the LG Smart TV brand was officially launched at CES 2011.

In 2013, LG acquired webOS from Hewlett-Packard and integrated it into its TV platform in 2014.

LG’s main office is in the LG Twin Towers in Seoul, South Korea.

I’m writing this four days after the clean reinstall and power reset, and the YouTube TV app continues to run smoothly on my smart TV.

With a bit of help from AI, this retired telecom tech solved one more problem.



Friday, November 7, 2025

Significant milestones in space and technology

@Mark Ollig

As November begins, I’d like to reflect on some of the early historical milestones associated with this month.

First commercial telegraph line

The first telegraph line in North America opened for regular commercial service between Buffalo and Lockport, New York, Nov. 7, 1845.

The single-wire circuit transmitted messages in Morse code over pole-mounted conductors.

The line was built under the direction of Orrin S. Wood, following Samuel F. B. Morse’s system, and marked the start of commercial telegraphy in the United States.

Gemini 12’s spacewalk lessons

Gemini 12 launched on Nov. 11, 1966, with astronauts James Lovell and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin aboard.

Aldrin performed three extravehicular activities (EVAs) totaling about five hours and 30 minutes, using handholds and footholds attached to the Gemini spacecraft.

Lovell and Aldrin also completed a rendezvous and docking with the Agena Target Vehicle in Earth orbit.

As the final Gemini mission, Gemini 12 validated EVA techniques and rendezvous procedures later used for Apollo lunar module rendezvous and docking.

Surveyor 6 lands and hops on the Moon

Surveyor 6 launched Nov. 7, 1967, and landed in Sinus Medii Nov. 10. It transmitted 29,952 television pictures of the lunar surface.

Surveyor 6 performed the first remote-controlled “hop” on another world Nov. 17, 1967, rising about 10 to 12 feet above the surface and landing about eight feet away under commands from NASA controllers.

Its data showed the lunar surface could support the Apollo Lunar Module and helped identify future landing sites.

Apollo 4 and the first Saturn V flight

Apollo 4 launched Nov. 9, 1967, from Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39A, marking the first flight of the Saturn V rocket.

This uncrewed mission tested all three stages of the rocket, along with the command and service module.

The mission simulated a high-speed lunar return when the command module reentered Earth’s atmosphere at nearly 25,000 miles per hour, successfully validating the heat shield’s performance.

Mariner 9 arrives at Mars

NASA’s Mariner 9 became the first spacecraft to orbit another planet when it entered orbit around Mars Nov. 13, 1971 (CST).

A global dust storm initially obscured the surface, but once it cleared, Mariner 9 revealed volcanoes, valleys, and ancient riverbeds, including Olympus Mons and Valles Marineris.

The orbiter mapped about 85% of the planet’s surface and returned 7,329 images before the mission completed Oct. 27, 1972.

Voyager 1 Saturn flyby

NASA’s Voyager 1 space probe launched Sept. 5, 1977.

It made its closest approach to Saturn Nov. 12, 1980, at a distance of about 78,000 miles from the planet’s cloud tops and captured images of Saturn’s rings, moons, and Titan.

Now traveling through interstellar space, Voyager 1 is about 15.7 billion miles from Earth and continues to transmit data to NASA’s Deep Space Network.

STS-2: First reuse of a shuttle

NASA launched the Space Transportation System (STS) Space Shuttle Columbia Nov. 12, 1981, marking the first reuse of a space shuttle orbiter since STS-1 April 12, 1981.

Astronauts Joe Engle and Richard Truly spent two days testing shuttle systems, including the Office of Space and Terrestrial Applications (OSTA-1), which carried the first scientific payload aboard the Space Shuttle.

Microsoft announces Windows

Microsoft founder Bill Gates introduced Windows, a groundbreaking graphical user interface, at the Helmsley Palace Hotel in New York City, NY, Nov. 10, 1983.

Windows 1.0 was released to customers in November 1985, marking the launch of a new era in personal computing.

The birth of AOL

Quantum Link (Q-Link) launched Nov. 5, 1985, for Commodore 64 and 128 users.

It featured graphical menus and icons, offering services like email, chat rooms, forums, and file libraries.

Users could play online games, such as Island of Kesmai and Habitat, which included avatars.

Most dial-up connections were at speeds of 300 to 2,400 bits per second.

Q-Link evolved into America Online in October 1989.

AOL discontinued its dial-up service Sept. 30, 2025.

First internet radio simulcast

WXYC-FM 89.3 at UNC-Chapel Hill became the first traditional radio station to stream live on the internet Nov. 7, 1994.

Listeners installed Cornell’s CU-SeeMe program on their computer, typed in the UNC SunSITE server address, and listened through that connection.

WREK 91.1 FM in Atlanta also streamed that day in a beta test. KJHK 90.7 FM at the University of Kansas began broadcasting a public stream Dec. 3, 1994.

Apple iPod goes on sale

Apple introduced the iPod Oct. 23, 2001, with a five-gigabyte, 1.8-inch hard drive. The first model could hold about 1,000 songs.

It went on sale Nov. 10, 2001, and synced with iTunes on an Apple Mac computer over a FireWire cable, which also charged the iPod.

Firefox 1 release

Millions of users quickly adopted Mozilla’s Firefox web browser after its release Nov. 9, 2004.

Its open-source model and tabbed browsing gave people a fresh choice beyond Internet Explorer and revived competition on the web.

Rosetta’s Philae lands on a comet

The Philae lander, carried by the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft, touched down on comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko on Nov. 12, 2014.

Its grappling-hook harpoons, designed to anchor the lander, failed to fire, and Philae bounced twice before coming to rest in shadow.

Philae returned images and instrument data before its batteries depleted.

Rosetta remained in orbit from Aug. 6, 2014, until a controlled descent concluded the mission Sept. 30, 2016.

Philae became the first spacecraft to land on a comet.

Twitter expands to 280 characters

Twitter increased the character limit on its website from 140 to 280 characters Nov. 7, 2017.

The change was intended to solve “cramming,” a problem where users frequently hit the 140-character limit and needed to shorten the words used in their tweets (posts).

AI web browsers

The Browser Company’s Dia announced an integrated AI web browser Nov. 3, 2025.

Opera Limited, majority-owned by Kunlun Tech, released the Neon AI browser Sept. 30.

In October, there were AI updates to its Opera and Opera GX web browsers.

Major technological milestones have progressed from the first commercial telegraph to space exploration and now AI-powered web browsers.