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Cellular digital packet data
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{{Redirect|CDPD|British copyright law|Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988}} {{no footnotes|date=March 2013}} '''Cellular Digital Packet Data''' ('''CDPD''') is an obsolete wide-area mobile data service which used unused [[Bandwidth (signal processing)|bandwidth]] normally used by [[Advanced Mobile Phone System]] (AMPS) [[mobile phone]]s between 800 and 900 [[MHz]] to transfer data. Speeds up to 19.2 [[kbit/s]] were possible, though real world speeds seldom reached higher than 9.6 kbit/s. The service was discontinued in conjunction with the retirement of the parent AMPS service; it has been functionally replaced by faster services such as [[1xRTT]], [[EV-DO|Evolution-Data Optimized]], and [[UMTS]]/[[High Speed Packet Access]] (HSPA). Developed in the early 1990s, CDPD was large on the horizon as a future technology. However, it had difficulty competing against existing slower but less expensive [[Mobitex]] and [[DataTac|DataTAC]] systems, and never quite gained widespread acceptance before newer, faster standards such as [[GPRS|General Packet Radio Service]] (GPRS) became dominant. CDPD had very limited consumer products. [[AT&T Wireless]] first sold the technology in the United States under the PocketNet brand. It was one of the first products of wireless web service. [[Digital Ocean|Digital Ocean, Inc.]] an [[original equipment manufacturer]] licensee of the [[Apple Newton]], sold the Seahorse product, which integrated the Newton handheld computer, an AMPS/CDPD handset/modem along with a web browser in 1996, winning the CTIA's hardware product of the year award as a smartphone, arguably the world's first. A company named [[OmniSky]] provided service for [[Palm V]] devices. OmniSky then filed for bankruptcy in 2001 then was picked up by [[EarthLink Wireless]]. The technician that developed the tech support for all of the wireless technology was a man by the name of Myron Feasel he was brought from company to company ending up at Palm. Sierra Wireless sold PCMCIA devices and Airlink sold a serial modem. Both of these were used by police and fire departments for dispatch. Wireless later sold CDPD under the Wireless Internet brand (not to be confused with Wireless Internet Express, their brand for GPRS/EDGE data). PocketNet was generally considered a failure with competition from 2G services such as Sprint's Wireless Web. AT&T Wireless sold four PocketNet Phone models to the public: the Samsung Duette and the Mitsubishi MobileAccess-120 were AMPS/CDPD PocketNet phones introduced in October 1997; and two IS-136/CDPD Digital PocketNet phones, the Mitsubishi T-250 and the Ericsson R289LX. Despite its limited success as a consumer offering, CDPD was adopted in a number of enterprise and government networks. It was particularly popular as a first-generation wireless data solution for [[telemetry]] devices (machine to machine communications) and for public safety mobile data terminals. In 2004, major carriers in the [[United States]] announced plans to shut down CDPD service. In July 2005, the [[AT&T Wireless]] and [[Cingular Wireless]] CDPD networks were shut down.
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