Originally posted by: pm
As a point of clarification, humans can't hear 200MHz.About the highest pitch that people can hear is 22-24kHz. Everything else you wrote, Mr. Pork, is dead-on though.
The underlying cause of the speaker noise is caused by the time division multiplexing technique used in GSM/TDMA. GSM uses time slots in the data stream that are dedicated to a given phone. As the phone enters a timeslot, interferance is created at frequencies that correspond to the length of the timeslot. There's a technical name for this that I can't remember (college was too long ago) but basically it's spectrum noise that gets picked up by unshielded devices that are nearby.
It can be prevented by turning off the transmitter (airplane mode, or turning it off), or by shielding everything (which is the technique used by Apple with "certified iPhone acessories"), or by creating a common ground plane between the devices - like the speaker/phone and the cell phone (also used by Apple with the iPhone). It can also be prevented by moving the cell phone away from the speaker... the power of a signal drops off by the cube root of the distance... so moving it a bit further away should dramatically reducing the noise.
As mentioned CDMA phones don't experience this problem (Verizon, Sprint, Cricket, etc.).
Also, nearly all of the "next generation" cell phone systems planned will not have this problem any more since every one that I can think of is moving over to a CDMA/W-CDMA/SOFDMA, OFDM and other code-based and frequency-based multiplexing schemes. Even similar schemes like TD-CMDA do not suffer from interference like TDMA/GSM.
Originally posted by: pm
As a point of clarification, humans can't hear 200MHz.About the highest pitch that people can hear is 22-24kHz. Everything else you wrote, Mr. Pork, is dead-on though.
The underlying cause of the speaker noise is caused by the time division multiplexing technique used in GSM/TDMA. GSM uses time slots in the data stream that are dedicated to a given phone. As the phone enters a timeslot, interferance is created at frequencies that correspond to the length of the timeslot. There's a technical name for this that I can't remember (college was too long ago) but basically it's spectrum noise that gets picked up by unshielded devices that are nearby.
It can be prevented by turning off the transmitter (airplane mode, or turning it off), or by shielding everything (which is the technique used by Apple with "certified iPhone acessories"), or by creating a common ground plane between the devices - like the speaker/phone and the cell phone (also used by Apple with the iPhone). It can also be prevented by moving the cell phone away from the speaker... the power of a signal drops off by the cube root of the distance... so moving it a bit further away should dramatically reducing the noise.
As mentioned CDMA phones don't experience this problem (Verizon, Sprint, Cricket, etc.).
Also, nearly all of the "next generation" cell phone systems planned will not have this problem any more since every one that I can think of is moving over to a CDMA/W-CDMA/SOFDMA, OFDM and other code-based and frequency-based multiplexing schemes. Even similar schemes like TD-CMDA do not suffer from interference like TDMA/GSM.
I did noy know the industry was moving away from GSM. Does this mean Sim cards will no longer work and getting a new phone will be a new PITA when transferring over contacts?