Thursday, November 21, 2019
Rise and fall of the landline 143 years of telephones
Rise and fall of the landline 143 years of telephonesRise and fall of the landline 143 years of telephonesThe global economy has changed dramatically over the past century and a half.When I lecture my Boston University business students on this topic, I use one of the worlds fruchtwein transformative inventions to illustrate my point the telephone.Follow Ladders on FlipboardFollow Ladders magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and moreBefore the telephone was invented, it was impossible to communicate by voice across any kind of distance. The landline in 1876, along with the telegraph a few decades earlier, revolutionized communications, leading leap by leap to the powerful computers tucked snugly in our pockets and purses today. And in the process, living standards exploded, with inflation-adjusted GDP surging from US$1,200 per person in 1870 to more than $10,000 today.What follows are a few facts I like to share with my students, as well as several others that you might not be aware of about how the phone has reshaped our lives and continues to do so.Watson I want to binnensee youOne of the reasons I use the telephone in my lectures is because inventor Alexander Graham Bell actually created his phone and made the first call while a professor at Boston University, where I teach economics.But thats not the end of the story. Controversy continues over who actually invented the phone first. While Bell won the series of court battles over the first patent, some historians still give credit to Elisha Gray or Antonio Meucci, both of whom had been working on similar devices.The first telephone call happened on March 10, 1876, a few days after the Scottish-born inventor received a patent for the device. After he accidentally spilled battery acid on himself, Bell called for his assistant with the famous phrase Mr. Watson, come here I want to see youIn fact, in 2002, the U.S. Congress acknowledged Meuccis role in the invention of the telephone though it didnt give him sole credit.Number of connected telephonesPhones abfluged out as novelty items shown just to kings and queens.Today, they are something almost everyone carries with them, even the homeless.In 1914, at the start of World War I, there were 10 people for every working telephone in the U.S. By the end of World War II in 1945, there were five people for every working phone.The technology passed a key milestone in 1998, when there was one phone for every man, woman and child in the U.S.As of 2017, there were 455 million telephone numbers for the United States 325 million residents, or 1.4 per person. About three-quarters of those numbers were tied to mobile phones, a little over 10 percent were for old-fashioned landlines, and the rest were for internet-enabled phones.This Trimline phone came out in December 1986.Wikimedia Commons, CC BYPeople used to rent their phonesIt may sound odd today, but until the early 1980s many consumers had to rent their phones from ATT.Until then, the company had a monopoly over most of the U.S. phone system. And in many states, ATT would only rent phones to customers. In the early 1980s, the rental fee was $1.50 to about $5 per month depending on the type of phone.That changed in 1983, when the U.S. government ended ATTs monopoly. Consumers in all parts of the country suddenly had the option to buy their own phone. At the time, the price for the most basic black rotary dial phone was $19.95, or a bit over $50 in todays dollars.The fanciest Trimline phone with push-buttons, instead of a rotary dial was sold for about $55, which is just under $150 today.Plummeting costsOne reason phones have become so indispensable for communicating is that the cost keeps dropping to make calls.Making a coast-to-coast phone call a century ago was very expensive. Back in 1915, a three-minute daytime phone call from New York City to San Francisco cost $20.70. Adjusted for inflation, that means the rather abrupt call cost more than $500 in todays money.Over the next half-century, prices fell drastically, although it was still rather pricey. In 1968, the same three-minute call cost $1.70 or about $12 today. Thats why, when I was dating the woman who became my wife, we primarily spoke at night when phone calls were much cheaper to save a little money.Today, almost no one thinks about the price of a single cross-country call or tries to keep conversations short to save money. Phone call prices plummeted after the breakup of the U.S. telephone monopoly in the 1980s. And the invention of technologies like voice over IP popularized by Skype pushed prices down even further.Prices have gotten so low that the Federal Communications Commission stopped tracking the cost of long-distance calls in 2006. After decades of recording phone call costs it reported the average long-distance call in 2006 cost just 6 cents per minute. Since most people dont pay by the minute anymore an extra minute of talking on the phone today is effectively free.Theres a dark side to cheap calls, however. Robocalls are now constantly spamming Americans. The same reduction in price makes it easy for con artists to ring millions of phone numbers looking for someone gullible enough to believe their pitches.Phone demographicsIt gets a bit more interesting when you look at what types of phones households still use. There has been a dramatic shift in the last few years from landlines to cellphones, with a surprising connection to our well-being.In 2018, a government survey found that almost 55 percent of households use cellphones exclusively, up from less than 10 percent in 2005. Another 36 percent have both a mobile phone and a working landline. Just over 5 percent of those surveyed said they relied entirely on a landline, compared with over a third of households in 2005. The remaining 3 percent said they didnt have a phone.So who are those people who still only use landlines?Since its the Center s for Disease Control and Prevention that actually conducts this survey, we know a little more about those 5 percent. As you might expect, they are primarily elderly people and they tend to own their homes. In contrast, households that have only mobile phones are more likely to be made up of young people who are renting. Theyre also more likely to be poor and live in the Northeast.In terms of well-being, the CDC notes that the adults in wireless homes are more likely to be healthier and get plenty of exercise than those with only landlines. Conversely, they are also substantially more likely to have had at least one heavy drinking day in the past year and more apt to be a current smoker.Phones have reshaped our lives. The next time you pull out your phone, spend a minute pondering what your life and the world would be like if the phone hadnt been created.Jay L. Zagorsky, Senior lecturer, Boston UniversityThis article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons lic ense. Read the original article.You might also enjoyNew neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happyStrangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds10 lessons from Benjamin Franklins daily schedule that will double your productivityThe worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs10 habits of mentally strong people
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.