Early Pre-Telecommunication Era (16th – 18th Century)
- 16th–17th century: Communication relied on visual and acoustic methods (beacons, drums, smoke signals, messengers).
- 1600s–1700s: The first optical telegraphs (signal towers) were used in Europe (notably France by Claude Chappe in 1790s).
→ These systems used moving arms or lights to send coded messages.
The Telegraph & Telephone Era (19th Century)
- 1837: Samuel Morse (USA) invents the electric telegraph → Morse Code revolutionized long-distance messaging.
- 1850s: Telegraph cables spread across Europe and America.
- 1866: First transatlantic telegraph cable connected Europe and North America.
- 1876: Alexander Graham Bell (Scotland-born, working in the USA) patents the telephone.
→ This shifted communication from coded text to real-time voice transmission.
Dominant players (19th century):
- USA (Bell Telephone Company → later AT&T).
- UK (Telegraph systems across the Empire).
- France & Germany (Siemens in telegraphy).
Radio, Broadcasting & Early Wireless (20th Century pre-1940s)
- 1895: Guglielmo Marconi (Italy) demonstrates wireless telegraphy (radio).
- 1901: First transatlantic wireless signal.
- 1920s: Commercial radio broadcasting begins (USA, UK).
- 1930s: Early experiments with television transmission.
Post-War Telecommunications (1940s–1970s)
- 1947: Bell Labs (USA) conceives the cellular network concept.
- 1960s: Satellite communications (Telstar, 1962).
- 1973: Martin Cooper (Motorola, USA) makes the first handheld mobile phone call.
Mobile Generations (1G → 6G)
1G – First Generation (1980s)
- Technology: Analog voice, low capacity, poor security.
- Dominant country: USA (Motorola, AT&T, Bell Labs).
- Leading companies: Motorola, AT&T, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT – Japan).
2G – Second Generation (1990s)
- Technology: Digital voice (GSM, CDMA), SMS, better quality.
- Dominant country: Europe (especially Finland, Sweden) with GSM standard.
- Leading companies: Nokia (Finland), Ericsson (Sweden), Motorola (USA).
- Note: USA pushed CDMA, but GSM (European) dominated globally.
3G – Third Generation (2000s)
- Technology: Mobile internet, video calls, 384 kbps → 2 Mbps speeds.
- Dominant country: Japan (NTT DoCoMo launched first 3G in 2001).
- Leading companies: NTT DoCoMo (Japan), Ericsson (Sweden), Nokia (Finland), Qualcomm (USA).
4G – Fourth Generation (2010s)
- Technology: Mobile broadband (LTE, WiMAX), HD streaming, 100 Mbps+ speeds.
- Dominant country: USA, with Qualcomm and Verizon pioneering LTE.
- Leading companies: Qualcomm (USA), Huawei (China), Ericsson (Sweden), Nokia (Finland), Samsung (Korea).
5G – Fifth Generation (2020s)
- Technology: Gigabit speed, ultra-low latency, IoT, autonomous systems.
- Dominant country: China, leading in deployment and patents.
- Leading companies: Huawei (China), ZTE (China), Ericsson (Sweden), Nokia (Finland), Qualcomm (USA), Samsung (Korea).
- Patent leadership: China holds 30–40% of essential 5G patents (Huawei, ZTE).
6G – Sixth Generation (Expected 2030s)
- Technology: Terahertz frequencies, holographic communication, AI-native networks, 100x faster than 5G.
- Dominant countries (so far):
- China (early patents & trials, Huawei & ZTE).
- USA (Qualcomm, Apple, universities).
- South Korea (Samsung, LG).
- Europe (Nokia, Ericsson, EU Horizon projects).
- Patent leadership (current, 2025): China leads, followed by the USA and South Korea.







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