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Motorola engineer Martin Cooper makes the first mobile phone call

On a spring afternoon in 1973 C.E., a man stood on a Manhattan sidewalk and made a call that no one around him would have believed was possible. Martin Cooper, an engineer at Motorola, lifted a prototype device to his ear — a brick-sized object that weighed about 2.5 pounds — and dialed a rival. The person he called was Joel Engel, head of research at Bell Labs, the company that had long assumed it would own the future of wireless communication.

Key details

  • First mobile phone call: Cooper placed the call on April 3, 1973 C.E., from Sixth Avenue in New York City, near 53rd and 54th Streets, using a prototype of what would become the Motorola DynaTAC 8000x.
  • Motorola DynaTAC prototype: The device weighed roughly 2.5 pounds, stood nearly a foot tall, and connected through a 900 MHz base station — a far cry from the slim smartphones that would follow decades later.
  • Commercial mobile technology timeline: It took another 10 years for the DynaTAC to reach consumers, and two more decades for mobile phones to surpass landlines in worldwide usage — meaning the full disruption unfolded slowly and unevenly across the globe.

The rival on the other end of the line

The choice of Joel Engel as the recipient of that first call was not accidental. Bell Labs had been developing its own mobile telephone technology for years, and many in the industry assumed that AT&T — Bell’s parent company — would control whatever wireless future emerged. Cooper’s call was, in part, a declaration: Motorola had beaten them to it.

What Cooper actually said is lost to reliable record. He later recalled something along the lines of “I’m ringing you just to see if my call sounds good at your end,” which lacks the quotable drama of Alexander Graham Bell’s “Mr. Watson, come here” or Samuel Morse’s “What hath God wrought.” But the modesty of the words matched the uncertainty of the moment. No one knew yet what mobile communication would become.

The call connected through a base station that Motorola had quietly set up in the area. Passersby on Sixth Avenue reportedly stopped and stared. Some thought Cooper was a prop in a film shoot. Others simply gawked at a person apparently talking into a large plastic object with no cord attached.

A decade of work before a single consumer call

The 1973 C.E. demonstration was a proof of concept, not a product. Motorola’s engineers spent the next decade shrinking the technology, strengthening the signal, and navigating the regulatory process with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. The DynaTAC 8000x finally went on sale in 1983 C.E. — priced at $3,995, roughly $12,000 in today’s money. Early adopters were wealthy, and early coverage was thin.

The rollout was far from even. Mobile infrastructure spread first through wealthy urban centers in North America, Europe, and parts of Asia. Many communities in Africa, Latin America, and rural regions globally had to wait much longer. And yet, when mobile networks did arrive in those places — often leapfrogging landline infrastructure entirely — they sometimes closed gaps in banking, healthcare access, and emergency communication in ways that richer markets had never needed them to.

By the late 1990s C.E., the global picture had shifted significantly. Finland, for example, had more mobile subscriptions than landlines by 1998 C.E. Sub-Saharan Africa’s mobile adoption in the 2000s C.E. became one of the fastest expansions of communication technology in history.

Lasting impact

Cooper’s 1973 C.E. call set in motion a transformation that is, by any measure, one of the most sweeping in human history. There are now more mobile subscriptions on Earth than there are people. The phone in a pocket today holds more computing power than the entire Apollo program. Mobile devices have become platforms for navigation, translation, news, medicine, commerce, and human connection across languages and borders.

The influence stretches well beyond convenience. Mobile technology has been linked to measurable gains in economic participation in lower-income countries — enabling smallholder farmers to access price data, allowing migrant workers to send money home cheaply, and connecting patients in remote areas to medical guidance. None of that was in Cooper’s mind on Sixth Avenue in 1973 C.E. But it flowed from that moment, through a chain of engineering, investment, policy, and human ingenuity.

Cooper himself, now in his 90s, has remained a vocal figure in the mobile technology world, often pushing back on the idea that screens and smartphones have been an unqualified good. He has argued that the technology still has enormous unrealized potential — particularly in healthcare — and that the industry has been too slow to serve that purpose.

Blindspots and limits

The story of the first mobile phone call is often told as the triumph of one inventor and one company, but the infrastructure that made it possible — spectrum allocation, signal theory, network architecture — was built on decades of collective research across many institutions, including the Bell Labs team Cooper was racing against. The engineers and researchers whose names aren’t remembered contributed just as much to the underlying science.

Mobile technology also arrived with costs that were not fully anticipated: the environmental toll of mining the minerals in every device, the concentration of market power in a handful of platforms, and the psychological effects of near-constant connectivity — particularly on young people — remain genuinely unresolved. The call Cooper made in 1973 C.E. opened a door. What has walked through it is a much more complicated story.

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For more on this story, see: The Atlantic

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