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Aa cellphone raavadaaniki nene kaaranam thamullu


pamogudu

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1 hour ago, pamogudu said:

 

Already discoed. 

It is true. Appatilo Vajpayee time lo baboru suggested telecom reforms anta. Anduke cell phones came to India anta. Otherwise inka landlines lo vundedi India still ippatiki

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35 minutes ago, futureofandhra said:

Cbn did good job along with vajpayee 

Good job cbn 

On this day 20 years ago, the first mobile phone call was made in India

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.

News18.com

Updated:July 31, 2015, 5:42 PM IST
facebookTwitter Pocket
 
The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.
 

 

New Delhi: On this day, exactly 20 years ago, a telephone call was made. It changed the way we communicate for ever and ushered in a communication revolution in India.

 

 

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995. It was a first for India.

 

 

The call made in July 1995, between Writer's Building in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Sanchar Bhavan in New Delhi was carried over Modi Telstra's MobileNet service. That cellular call inaugurated MobileNet service in Calcutta.

 

 
 
 

 

Modi Telstra was a joint venture between India's Modi Group and Australian telecom giant Telstra. The company was one of the eight companies licensed to provide cellular services in India. Two licences were awarded each for the four metropolitian cities.

 

 

Telecomminications in India has come a long way since 1995. At the end of May 2015 the total number of telephone connections in the country crossed the one billion mark. Of the billion phone connections a overwheling 975.78 million connections were wireless or mobile.

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Just now, pamogudu said:

On this day 20 years ago, the first mobile phone call was made in India

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.

News18.com

Updated:July 31, 2015, 5:42 PM IST
facebookTwitter Pocket
 
The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.
 

 

New Delhi: On this day, exactly 20 years ago, a telephone call was made. It changed the way we communicate for ever and ushered in a communication revolution in India.

 

 

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995. It was a first for India.

 

 

The call made in July 1995, between Writer's Building in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Sanchar Bhavan in New Delhi was carried over Modi Telstra's MobileNet service. That cellular call inaugurated MobileNet service in Calcutta.

 

 
 
 

 

Modi Telstra was a joint venture between India's Modi Group and Australian telecom giant Telstra. The company was one of the eight companies licensed to provide cellular services in India. Two licences were awarded each for the four metropolitian cities.

 

 

Telecomminications in India has come a long way since 1995. At the end of May 2015 the total number of telephone connections in the country crossed the one billion mark. Of the billion phone connections a overwheling 975.78 million connections were wireless or mobile.

Nuvu gitla nijalni tovvithe manchiga undadu cheptuna bro , cell phone ante cbn cbn ante smart phone anthe

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1 minute ago, pamogudu said:

On this day 20 years ago, the first mobile phone call was made in India

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.

News18.com

Updated:July 31, 2015, 5:42 PM IST
facebookTwitter Pocket
 
The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.
 

 

New Delhi: On this day, exactly 20 years ago, a telephone call was made. It changed the way we communicate for ever and ushered in a communication revolution in India.

 

 

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995. It was a first for India.

 

 

The call made in July 1995, between Writer's Building in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Sanchar Bhavan in New Delhi was carried over Modi Telstra's MobileNet service. That cellular call inaugurated MobileNet service in Calcutta.

 

 
 
 

 

Modi Telstra was a joint venture between India's Modi Group and Australian telecom giant Telstra. The company was one of the eight companies licensed to provide cellular services in India. Two licences were awarded each for the four metropolitian cities.

 

 

Telecomminications in India has come a long way since 1995. At the end of May 2015 the total number of telephone connections in the country crossed the one billion mark. Of the billion phone connections a overwheling 975.78 million connections were wireless or mobile.

This is quite funny 😂

First mobile phone call cheyatam kadhu man

When did it went to common man 😂

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Just now, pamogudu said:

On this day 20 years ago, the first mobile phone call was made in India

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.

News18.com

Updated:July 31, 2015, 5:42 PM IST
facebookTwitter Pocket
 
The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995.
 

 

New Delhi: On this day, exactly 20 years ago, a telephone call was made. It changed the way we communicate for ever and ushered in a communication revolution in India.

 

 

The then Union Telecom Minister Sukh Ram and the then Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu spoke to each other using hand held mobile phones on July 31, 1995. It was a first for India.

 

 

The call made in July 1995, between Writer's Building in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Sanchar Bhavan in New Delhi was carried over Modi Telstra's MobileNet service. That cellular call inaugurated MobileNet service in Calcutta.

 

 
 
 

 

Modi Telstra was a joint venture between India's Modi Group and Australian telecom giant Telstra. The company was one of the eight companies licensed to provide cellular services in India. Two licences were awarded each for the four metropolitian cities.

 

 

Telecomminications in India has come a long way since 1995. At the end of May 2015 the total number of telephone connections in the country crossed the one billion mark. Of the billion phone connections a overwheling 975.78 million connections were wireless or mobile.

Worst people. 

Cell phone India ki ravataaniki main reason in a baboriki first call seyyaleda

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7 minutes ago, futureofandhra said:

This is quite funny 😂

First mobile phone call cheyatam kadhu man

When did it went to common man 😂

20 years of the mobile phone in India: One call that started it all

July 31, 2015, 7:08 AM IST Economic Times in ET Commentary | Economy, India, World | ET
 
 
 
 

By Umang Das

India’s mobile revolution started with one symbolic call on this day 20 years ago. Since then, India has emerged as the world’s second-largest telecom market by subscribers and remains among the fastest growing in the world. Barring basic commodities, no other product or service has a base of a billion consumers.

Amobile revolution was unthinkable when the then West Bengal CM Jyoti Basu made the first mobile call to Sukh Ram, the then Union communications minister, on July 31, 1995. As the CEO of Modi Telstra (later branded as Spice), India’s first mobile operator, it was my good fortune that the historic call was made over its network and I was a participant to it. When I look back, it still seems unbelievable.

It all started when sometime in mid-1994, Basu invited B K Modi, who was the chairman of the erstwhile Modi Telstra, and me in his office at the Writers’ Building secretariat in Calcutta.

Mobil.jpg

We weren’t expecting anything more than a courtesy meeting. Towards the end of the meeting, Basu, in his typical bhadralok manner, asserted that Calcutta should become India’s first city to have a mobile network. The entrepreneurial zeal of Modi made him commit to an exact date: July 31, 1995, as my mind immediately moved towards ‘project countdown’.

Equipped with the determination to keep our word, we landed up in Australia to hold discussions with our joint venture partner, Telstra, to help us to find a suitable technology partner.

The hunt for the technical expert who could roll out such a network brought us to Nokia, which had been a sleeping giant till then in Australia. Nokia had cutting-edge technology, but were initially reluctant. Perhaps it was the timeline.

It took us a bit of convincing to get them going and it wasn’t until Nokia agreed to accompany us that we hopped on the same flight back to India. And that’s how we partnered with a sceptical Nokia to accomplish the impossible.

Within nine months, the network was in place. We kept the promise by being ingenious, but played it by the book. There has been no looking back for Indian telecom since then.

The same indomitable spirit that established India’s first mobile network became the very DNA of the telecom industry. Operator after operator, through court rulings and scandals, overcoming infrastructure bottlenecks and technology upheavals, the Indian telecom sector, like a Bollywood potboiler, has seen it all.

In a highly regulated environment, India has the highest number of mobile players in any service area in each of the country’s 22 telecom circles. Such intense competition has helped Indian users enjoy some of the world’s lowest tariffs. To top it all, a massive spectrum crunch and myriad problems in the deployment of telecom infrastructure couldn’t curb this growth impetus. It has survived despite several roadblocks. In fact, it is because of the people — the subscribers — that this industry has not only survived but actually thrived.

Today, two of the biggest development schemes of the government, Digital India and Smart Cities, rely on wireless telecommunications to bear the fruits of a connected society. Moreover, the other two government programmes, Skill India and Make in India, are predominantly relying on the power of telecom and technology. Had it not been for the mobile revolution, India’s buzzing startup scene wouldn’t have been half as vibrant as it is today.

It is hard to predict how the next 20 years will look like for telecommunications. Fourth-generation wireless technology is yet to take off in a big way in India. And yet, we are already talking about the arrival of fifth generation wireless tech. Surely, technological innovations will change the way we interact. In an ‘appified’ world, it seems that there will be an app for every need.

The uneasy relationship between telecom and tech will continue as governments and civil society debate raging issues like net neutrality. However, what might not change is the quest for achieving the impossible and dreaming to change the world. A home-grown Google, Facebook, Uber or Xiaomi is a distinct possibility. And we may not even have to wait 20 years.

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