The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (2024)

By Tom OughFeatures correspondent

The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (1)The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (2)Getty Images

Mobile phones have found many uses in healthcare, such as allowing surgeons to consult far-flung colleagues in realtime (Credit: Getty Images)

The first ever call made with a mobile phone was a conversation 50 years ago between two rivals developing cellphone technology. Since then, the devices have found some unexpected uses.

The year was 1973. Joel Engel, an American engineer who had worked on Nasa's Apollo programme, was leading an effort to create the world's first handheld mobile phone. Research at Bell Labs, where Engel worked, had several decades earlier contributed to the development of clunky, car-phones that allowed calls to be made on the move. His team were now trying to take the technology a step further – a device that could be carried around everywhere.

On 3 April, however, the landline in Engel's laboratory rang. He picked up.

"Hi, Joel," said the voice at the other end of the line. It was Martin 'Marty' Cooper, the leader of a rival research group at a radio and electronics company called Motorola.

"I'm calling you on a cellphone, but a real cellphone," Cooper said. "A personal, handheld, portable cellphone."

The race was won, and in some style. Standing in front of reporters and photographers, Cooper had made the call from in front of the Hilton Midtown hotel on New York's Sixth Avenue – around 30 miles (48km) from Bell Labs in New Jersey where Engel stood silently on the other end. Soon it would be possible to hold conversations with another person – and even multiple people at once – from anywhere at any time. The ability to beam short text messages, and later pictures and eventually emojis, would then follow. But while mobile phones transformed the way our species communicates with one another, it barely scratches the surface of what they have enabled.

Fifty years after that seminal call by Cooper, mobile phones are now extraordinarily multi-functional. And they have changed our lives profoundly – sometimes in unexpected ways.

Cooper's prototype phone was brick-shaped and beige, with a large antenna and no screen. It was not an elegant device, but it had facilitated a landmark moment. Cooper's triumphant call to Engel was the first handheld mobile phone call.

Though the US government was supportive of the project, there were many technical and regulatory challenges. It took another 10 years for the device to become available to consumers. But the era of the mobile phone had begun – and it is an era in which the devices have profoundly changed our lives.

The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (3)The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (4)Getty Images

Fifty years ago Martin 'Marty' Cooper made history by placing the first ever call using a mobile phone (Credit: Getty Images)

The first iterations were expensive and cumbersome. Leslie Haddon, a lecturer in media and technology at the London School of Economics, was an early adopter, paying £300 (roughly $500 at the time) in the late 1980s for a Motorola.

"I could get my fingers round it," says Haddon. "It wasn't a brick at that stage, but it was a half-brick. It was substantial. You wouldn't put it in your pocket very easily."

At that stage, the function of mobile phones was to stand in for landlines, says Christopher Windmill, a senior lecturer in computer science at the University of Derby. "We'd just cut the cord," says Windmill, "We'd got access to voice communication and very little else on those very early devices in the 1970s and 80s."

Those humble beginnings were soon forgotten. TheNokia N95, released in 2006, had an FM radio, a colour screen, stereo speakers and a video camera. It also had very slow internet access. For a few months, it was the best phone on the market. Unfortunately for Nokia, the following June saw Apple's demonstration of something called the iPhone. Here in the 2020s, iPhones are ubiquitous worldwide, and an "N95"is a type of face mask.

But the N95, like the iPhone, exemplified the key quality that differentiates modern mobile devices from their predecessors – they are not simply phones, but instead combine a wide array of technology. Computer chips and transistors, says Windmill, have become smaller and faster, allowing the functionality of the devices that contain them to expand. "We get more processing power on them, and more ability to put sensors into them," he says.

Hence the early smartphones' inclusion of internet browsers, cameras, location services, torches, Bluetooth and accelerometers – circuitry that can tell what angle a phone is held at, allowing the device to automatically switch your display from portrait mode to landscape.This technological bundling has been intensifying ever since.

Today's smartphones are banking hubs, personal assistants, pocket-sized cinema screens and music players. They incorporate gyroscopes, barometers, thermometers, magnetometers, infra-red sensors and fingerprint sensors.

By varying the intensity and frequency of the vibrations, they can even create the sensation of different "textures" on the screen

Mobile internet speeds have radically improved, thanks in part to the rolling-out of services such as 5G internet (and manufacturers are already discussing the prospect of 6G networks in the coming years). The computational power packed into phones has also increased, and innovative software applications have opened up innovative ways of using these devices.

Take medicine. In brain surgery, iPhoneshave already begunto replace the expensive equipment that display the videos captured by endoscopes. During the Covid-19 pandemic, Bluetooth enabled software engineers to build contact tracing systems that could tell when we had been in close proximity to infected individuals – delivering us the dreaded "ping". Video calling allows medics to communicate with, and provide diagnoses to, patients in remote areas.

Combining artificial intelligence with the extraordinary data-gathering capabilities of smartphones, is creating other opportunities. One British start-up,Novoic, uses machine learning to detect early signs of Alzheimer's Disease by analysing speech recorded on mobile phones.

You might also like to read:

  • Marty Cooper describes making the first mobile phone call
  • What is the right age to get a cellphone?
  • Why your old phone is a gold mine

Similarly, GPS equipment in phones allow us to use them as sat-navs. But bundled technology has also enabled the creation of navigational features that are less well-known than Google Maps, but highly valued to their users – such those that facilitate haptic, or touch-based, navigation for the blind.

Researchers have used the vibration capabilities within most modern smartphones to create the digital equivalent of tactile maps that people with visual impairments can use to feel their way around their environment. By varying the intensity and frequency of the vibrations, they can even create the sensation of different "textures" on the screen as the user feels their way along a route, giving an indication of features or landmarks they might want to be aware of. One phone app, HapticNav, has gone a step further by linking to a wristband that guides people to their destinations using vibrations.

In school classrooms, however, mobile phones have often been far less welcome, serving as a distraction to students. But they can also be vessels for interactive learning. Apps such as Duolingo have gamified language learning while others such as the Complete Anatomy app, have brought a powerful new way for medical students to learn about the intricate workings of the human body with a few pinches and swipes. "You can see how muscles move," says Windmill. "You can dismantle bones and see what they're actually made of."

Apps like these are helping to democratise education, he adds. "You don't need an expensive PC. You don't need expensive headsets. You can have augmented reality, or virtual reality, on any device."

For younger children, Windmill points to an augmented-reality animation app created by researchers at Disney, which brings drawings of cartoon characters to life on a phone screen as they are coloured in.

The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (5)The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (6)Getty Images

Smartphones have enabled the digital and real worlds to be blended through augmented reality, allowing users to track aircraft overhead, for example (Credit: Getty Images)

There are few arenas of human endeavour left untouched by the smartphone. Phones have come to mediate even our engagement with the natural world. Many of us use apps such asPictureThis, or Google Lens, to identify plants we encounter, but farmers are also able to use phone-based apps to help them identify weeds, disease, pests and the signs of stress in their fields.

Farmers are also making increased use of phone-based tools that help them manage theirirrigation schedules, drawing on data from local weather stations. Andscientists can monitora forest's carbon sequestration, and general health, via data collected by LiDAR scanners that now come built into many leading phones including recent iPhones. LiDAR stands for "Light Detection and Ranging", and uses a pulsed laser to measure distance to quickly build up a 3D digital model of an object or a room. It is what enablesthe IKEA Place app, for instance, to show you what a given piece of furniture would look like in your house. Researchers at the University of Cambridge have found a way of using these phone sensors to measure the diameter of trees in woodland, allowing them to estimate forest health.

But phones bring challenges as well as benefits. They have led to widespread fears about the ill-effects of smartphone "addiction" and the ready access they give to social media such as Instagram and Twitter. But evidence for how mobile phones affect the mental health of children, for example, is inconsistent. (Read more about if there is a right age to get a smartphone.)

As smartphones continue to evolve, however, so too will the capabilities they unlock.

The identical-looking rectangular slabs most phones have become – the "candy bar" shape, as manufacturers put it – could give way once more with a new generation of folding phones, and the capacity for much larger screens that fit inside our pockets, says Elizabeth Woyke, author of The Smartphone: Anatomy of an Industry.

The same goes for smart glasses, Woyke thinks – a change that would mark the transference of smartphone capabilities to wearable technology. Google Glass was a high-profile failure, says Woyke, "but there is actually a lot of logic to smart glasses once they can figure out how to make a good pair".

Why rummage in your pocket for a device when audio can be piped directly to your ears and images can overlay your vision to help you navigate, shop and even recognise people.

Who would have thought that Engel's beige box would create such a spectacle?

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The surprising ways cellphones have changed our lives (2024)

FAQs

How did cell phones change people's lives? ›

The mobile phone has changed our attitudes and expectations. If people are late to a meeting, they are expected to notify others by calling on their mobile phones. It is no longer necessary to agree on when and where to meet. People can just call each other on their mobile phones and say where they are at the moment.

In what ways have smartphones changed our modern way of living? ›

Due to the increase of mobile use – which includes laptops, iPads and smartphones – employees in many industries can work from anywhere in the world. Instead of taking vacations, we can now take workcations, or working vacations, career site The Muse noted. All we need is an internet connection.

How have cell phones changed the lives of the poor? ›

Firmer Financial Footing with Mobile Technologies

The rise of mobile banking has had a massive impact in reducing poverty and improving the quality of life for those who otherwise do not have access to financial services.

What are the 10 uses of a mobile phone? ›

The 10 uses of a mobile phone include:
  • Communication (calls, texts)
  • Internet browsing.
  • Social media interaction.
  • GPS navigation.
  • Entertainment (games, videos, music)
  • Email access.
  • Online shopping.
  • Banking and financial transactions.
Mar 15, 2023

How do phones influence our lives? ›

Excessive screen time has been linked to everything from relationship issues to increased mental health problems. Screen time can also interfere with sleep, reduce productivity, and take a toll on our physical health.

How did telephone change people's lives? ›

It allowed instant long-distance communication, improved business efficiency, created new jobs, and influenced social etiquette and gender roles. The telephone also enhanced emergency services and news distribution, marking it as a key factor in modernising society and boosting connectivity.

How has the smartphone changed my life? ›

Here are some of the ways in which mobile phones have changed our lives: Communication: Mobile phones have revolutionized communication, making it possible to stay in touch with friends, family, and colleagues no matter where they are in the world.

How are phones changing our brains? ›

Reduced memory and learning

We also use our devices for a lot of our information storage - we no longer need to remember things because we write it on our devices, follow maps or take a picture - we consume and forget. And the less you use your brain to remember things, the worse it gets at it.

How have smartphones changed communication? ›

Our conversations have become more direct, instantaneous, and straightforward as we can now reach out to one another from anywhere in the world. Smartphones have also had a huge impact on our style of communication. We are now able to communicate instantly via text, video, instant messaging, and more.

What is the impact of cellphones? ›

Overuse of cell phones can act as a barrier to quality interactions and conversations, leading to decreased satisfaction in our relationships. Excessive device use can lead to feelings of being disconnected when we spend time with friends and family. Concentration and learning issues.

How do phones affect mental health? ›

The constant stream of notifications and updates can create a sense of urgency and a fear of missing out, leading to increased anxiety and stress. Furthermore, the excessive use of smartphones can interfere with sleep, which is crucial for mental health.

How have cell phones made our lives worse? ›

Some people even hate their phones, but still struggle to reduce use. In 2021, US adults spent on average eight hours with digital media each day. A growing body of evidence shows that the more time a person spends consuming digital media each day, the more likely they are to struggle with depression and anxiety.

Why is a cellphone important in our life? ›

They help us in making our lives easy and convenient. They help us communicate with our loved ones and carry out our work efficiently. Furthermore, they also do the work of the computer, calculator, and cameras.

How does your phone benefit you? ›

– Mobile phones allow us to stay connected with loved ones and friends no matter where we are. – With just a few taps on our screens, we can send messages, photos, and videos to anyone in the world. – Mobile phones have also made it easier for us to stay organized.

What was the first cell phone ever made? ›

The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X. In 1983, it became the first commercially available handheld cellular mobile phone. The first handheld cellular mobile phone was demonstrated by John F. Mitchell and Martin Cooper of Motorola in 1973, using a handset weighing 2 kilograms (4.4 lb).

How does mobile phone affect our life essay? ›

It is not so healthy to be constantly connected to social media on your phone. It can cause you to miss the necessary routine of your life and lead you to follow an unhealthy lifestyle. Mobile phone usage and addiction have increased mental health diseases, like anxiety, depression and other mental disorders.

How did mobile phones improved human communication? ›

Overall, cellphones have made communication more readily available; you can pick up your phone and instantly text or call someone almost anywhere in the world, provided they have cell reception available. Never before in history have humans been so connected to each other on a global scale.

Why was the cell phone an important invention? ›

The cell phone is without a fact one of the greatest inventions of the 20th century. Most people these days cannot visualize life without them. This small technological gadget gives us multiple functions, one of the most valuable is communication. Phones make it easier to check up and contact people than ever before.

What would life be like without mobile phones? ›

The time taken to communicate would also be significantly increased since cell phones allow people to talk instantaneously. Without the cell phone, long distant communications would be complicated making it difficult to keep in constant touch with friends or relatives who may live far away.

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