You can use any Skype phone on our network, as long as it is black...
Read this first on the matter of "The Carterfone is a device invented by Thomas Carter. It connects a two-way mobile radio system to the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN).
The device was acoustically, but not electrically, connected to the Public Switched Telephone Network. It was electrically connected to the base station of the mobile radio system, and got its power from the base station. All the electrical parts were encased in bakelite. When someone on the radio wished to speak to someone on phone, or "landline" (eg, "Central dispatch, patch me through to McGarrett"), the station operator at the base would dial the number. When callers on the radio and on the telephone are both in contact with the base station operator, the handset of the operator's telephone is placed on a cradle in the Carterfone device. A voice control circuit in the Carterfone automatically switches on the radio transmitter when the telephone caller is speaking; when he stops speaking, the radio returns to a receiving condition. A separate speaker is attached to the Carterfone to allow the base station operator to monitor the conversation, adjust the voice volume, and hang up his telephone when the conversation has ended.
This particular device was involved in a landmark United States regulatory decision related to telecommunications. The 1968 Federal Communications Commission allowed the Carterfone and other devices to be connected directly to the AT&T network, as long as they did not cause damage to the system. This ruling (13 F.C.C.2d 420) created the possibility of selling devices that could connect to the phone system using a protective coupler, and opened the market to customer owned equipment.
In February 2007, a petition was filed with the FCC by Skype, requesting the FCC to apply the Carterfone regulations to the wireless industry - which would mean that OEMs, portals and others will be able to offer wireless devices and services without the cellular operators needing to approve the handsets. However, on 1 April 2008 the FCC chairman indicated that he would oppose Skype's request. [1] " source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carterfone
And now follow the news : "As you sit here with your Blackberrys and your iPhones and your cell phones and whatever else may connect you wirelessly to Mother Earth's store of information, I think it's useful to take ourselves back to world in which Tom Carter struggled," Johnson continued. That world was one in which if you wanted to connect something to the nation's telecommunications system, you had to get permission from its owner, AT&T. source : 40 years later, some wonder if Carterfone is still relevant
Note Skype's position : " Not everybody concurred with this line of thinking, most notably Christopher Libertelli of Skype, the VoIP software company that has petitioned the FCC to apply Carterfone principles to the wireless market. You can download Skype for a Mac or PC. But despite the diversity of mobile phones, the wireless industry itself is pretty concentrated, Libertelli noted, compromising Skype's access to that platform.
"We have absolutely no protections for Skype in the mobile broadband environment," Libertelli charged. The wireless application market has turned into "a conversation between the carriers and their device manufacturers. If folks think that the device manufacturers are out there operating in a free market, selling the devices they would like to U.S. consumers," they're wrong." source : 40 years later, some wonder if Carterfone is still relevant
Related : FCC boss says no to Skype's desire for open cell networks
Google Search on Skype and FCC / Skype and Libertelli / Skype and Carterfone





















This is the first time I am reading about such old device. This post has information that is very interesting and very useful. This device provides good wireless services.
Posted by: Wireless Services | 20 October 2008 at 03:25 PM