POPULARITY
In Leaders Getting Coffee episode 41, our guest is real estate’s Martin Cooper, the principal of Harcourts Cooper & Co. Most will know him as the man on television shouting “the North Shore, what a great place to live.” But Martin Cooper’s story started in Queenstown where he grew up and where he admits to taking the magnificent landscape around him for granted. He was not the most committed student, but he enjoyed sports and the outdoors adventures that his natural surroundings offered. His father was a cabinet minister, and his work saw the family move to Mosgiel in Dunedin while Martin was at high school. Upon finishing school, and a couple of jobs that saw him away from home a lot, his desire to play senior rugby resulted in him returning to Dunedin and looking for a regular and local job. That search led him to real estate, a business naturally suited to his energetic and charismatic personality. He found it tough at first, but after three years, he decided it was to be his career. Despite the recession of the early 1990’s he established his own real estate business and, after a few tough years, learned that he was suited to recruiting, motivating and developing great people. Success followed in the Dunedin market, but Martin soon found it hard to resist the opportunities afforded by a bigger market and he moved to Auckland, intent on establishing himself and his business on the North Shore. Again, he found the early going tough, but he’d been there before. The result is Harcourts Cooper & Co, a 20 office, 480 person real estate business and a personal profile to match. Martin Cooper’s journey is an inspirational leadership story. On the Leaders Getting Coffee podcast, he talks to Bruce Cotterill about building resilience through the tough times, the importance of good people, and of putting a little bit of Disneyland into the aspirations of his team. He speaks openly about the pressures of keeping his business going through the Covid lockdowns and the toll of a recent complaints process. But the real value is in his view of how to be successful in a business that rewards success well. And of course, there’s plenty of advice on the state of the real estate market, and what lays ahead for first home buyers.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week Host Jim Collins is joined on the phone by Broadford correspondent Martin Cooper for all the news. Around the parishes which is sponsored by Tom Collins engineering.
El 3 de abril de 1973 Martin Cooper, considerado el padre del teléfono móvil, realizó la primera llamada en un celular, hace 52 años.El primer teléfono de la historia fue patentado en 1876, pero no fue hasta 1973 que llegó el teléfono móvil, que ahora conocemos como celular o smartphone.
Nel 1973 Martin Cooper, ingegnere della Motorola, inaugura l'epoca dei telefoni cellulari. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Revisiting one of several previous phone interviews with Dr. Marty Cooper, father of the cell phone. From two cellphone conversations (forgive the audio) Dr. Cooper tells us how to innovate any work (see MarkSpencerCook.com). A young Marty Cooper was once hired to join a small team at, then, tiny Motorola. His team was racing to beat a huge phone company (the old AT&T) to invent a phone that could be used in a car. Marty's team was way behind and lacked the government support the big company enjoyed. But something different started bothering Marty. Marty began asking his team very important but disruptive questions: “What difference would phone users really want? Why should they call another place—a car—they already have to call a kitchen or an office desk? Wouldn't they rather call a person, not another place?” Marty said over and over, “People would rather call a person, not a place!”When Marty asked the right questions, they ended up changing the world. He stood on a New York street and made the world's first public cell phone call to his competitor at AT&T. Hear Marty tell about this call. It refocused us on people, not places, and it changed how we relate forever.What role does creativity and passion play? To lift others, we need both. Mark and Marty talk about how observing real-life situations leads to fresh ideas. They also discuss the importance of finding expert advice and how new tools can bring teams together. Small tests and learning fast help make customers truly happy.Takeaways • Passion makes it possible to solve tough problems. • Spending time with real people leads to better ideas. • Working with experts can spark innovation. • Testing ideas first helps find solutions faster. • Real success means delighting your customers.Why does creative thinking require breaking the box?"You can't be creative and efficient at the same time." "To really understand something, you've got to burrow deep in minds." "The ideas themselves are kind of superficial…The right solution sells." To innovate, there is a way to know what a client is actually experiencing… Mark Cook and Dr. Marty CooperMarkSpencerCook.com Chapters00:00 The Power of Passion in Innovation01:27 Marty Cooper: The Father of the Cell Phone03:40 The Importance of Creative Thinking06:05 Understanding Customer Needs10:15 The Role of Observation in Innovation13:11 Experiencing the Customer's Journey17:23 Connecting with Experts for Breakthroughs20:31 The Future of Collaboration and Innovation24:00 Experimentation in the Innovation Process28:21 Delivering Customer DelightKeywordsinnovation, cell phone, cellphone, invention, Marty Cooper, Mark Cook, creativity, customer experience, collaboration, passion, problem-solving, breakthroughs, technology, leading, leadership, consulting, podcast, vodcast, YouTube, channel, Apple Podcast, Spotify
This week Host Jim Collins is joined on the phone by Broadford correspondent Martin Cooper for all the news. Wind farms, GAA news, Hurdlestown house and lack of sewerage news, This and more on Around the parishes which is sponsored by Tom Collins engineering.
The cellphone has come a long way since 1973, when Martin Cooper, an engineer at Motorola, called Joel Engel at AT&T to let Engel know he had lost the race for a new technology. Host Llewellyn King and Co-host Adam Clayton Powell III discuss the cellphone as an instrument of change with Christopher Guttman-McCabe, chief regulatory and communications officer at Anterix.
This week Host Jim Collins is joined on the phone by Broadford correspondent Martin Cooper for all the news. GAA news and camogie trip trip to the UK, local groups paid a trip to the Dail, This and more on Around the parishes which is sponsored by Tom Collins engineering.
If you like music made in and played in Grey and Bruce counties, then, Friends -- you are going to *love* this week's edition of Georgian Bay Roots Radio. Picking up where Tom left off last week talking about local music, this week's show is almost exclusively featuring local musicians, with music from Youth Discoveries Finalists, information about upcoming shows you can get to AND a track to get you amped up for Summerfolk 49! Catch it all here. Featuring tracks by Amanda and the Paper Cranes, Jaret Koop, David Hartt, Martin Cooper, Bill Dickson, Deep Blue Honey, Garnet Rogers, Gordon Lightfoot, Dave Hawkins, Richard Ebbs, Bill Monahan, Bella Frances, Kevin Couch and Sandy Harron!
První hovor z mobilního telefonu se uskutečnil 3. dubna 1973. Martin Cooper z firmy Motorola si vykračoval ulicemi Manhattanu, držel u ucha krabičku a skrze ni telefonoval. Ve světě mechanicky vytáčených telefonů a telefonních budek to byla věc tak nevídaná, že se kolemjdoucí uctivě rozestupovali. Firma Motorola potřebovala něco, čím by přesvědčila Kongres USA, aby rozhodl o přerozdělení frekvencí v její prospěch. A tak spatřil světlo světa mobilní telefon.
První hovor z mobilního telefonu se uskutečnil 3. dubna 1973. Martin Cooper z firmy Motorola si vykračoval ulicemi Manhattanu, držel u ucha krabičku a skrze ni telefonoval. Ve světě mechanicky vytáčených telefonů a telefonních budek to byla věc tak nevídaná, že se kolemjdoucí uctivě rozestupovali. Firma Motorola potřebovala něco, čím by přesvědčila Kongres USA, aby rozhodl o přerozdělení frekvencí v její prospěch. A tak spatřil světlo světa mobilní telefon.Všechny díly podcastu Příběhy z kalendáře můžete pohodlně poslouchat v mobilní aplikaci mujRozhlas pro Android a iOS nebo na webu mujRozhlas.cz.
Martin & Michelle Cooper are proud of the wines coming out of the Granite Belt Queensland, from Tempranillo to Albariño it's all made in the sunshine state. https://www.ridgemillestate.com/ridgemill-estate-winery-story. https://www.travellingsenorita.com. https://www.southernqueenslandcountry.com.au
There is one word in the English language that has more meanings than any other. A lot more! And the word is only 3 letters long. I begin this episode by revealing which word it is – and there is a good chance you have said the word multiple times today. https://www.rd.com/article/most-complicated-word-in-english/ Can you really inherit your mother's laugh or your father's temper? It is a little confusing because some traits you can inherit genetically, but other traits you get from them may just be because you grew up in the same house. Height is something genetically passed down – still not all tall parents have tall children, so how does that work? Heredity is often misunderstood and there is a lot about heredity we just don't know. Here to explain this fascinating topic so it all makes sense is Carl Zimmer. Carl writes for The New York Times and is author of the book, She Has Her Mother's Laugh: The Powers, Perversions and Potential of Heredity (https://amzn.to/2IG8KKR). Does anyone know who made the first cellphone call? Not only do we know, we have him here as a guest and you are about to meet him. Martin Cooper is considered the father of the cellphone. He helped to develop the whole basis for cellular technology when he worked at Motorola and did in fact place the very first cellphone call. Martin joins me to recall the early days of the cellphone and has some great terrific insight on the future of cellular technology. Martin is the author of the book Cutting the Cord: The Cell Phone Has Transformed Humanity (https://amzn.to/38aXwIV). Sneakers or tennis shoes are the footwear of choice for many of us. So where did they come from? Interestingly, it took quite a while for them to cross over from the world of sports to everyday casual wear . Listen as I explain the history and who the players were that brought sneakers to the forefront. https://www.factmonster.com/culture-entertainment/fashion/history-sneakers PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! MasterClass makes a meaningful gift this season! .Right now you can get two Memberships for the price of one at https://MasterClass.com/SOMETHING PrizePicks is a skill-based, real-money Daily Fantasy Sports game that's super easy to play. Go to https://prizepicks.com/sysk and use code sysk for a first deposit match up to $100 Spread holiday cheer this season with a new phone! Get any phone free, today at UScellular. Built for US. Terms apply. Visit https://UScellular.com for details. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Martin Cooper is an engineer, an entrepreneur, and a futurist. Known as the “father of the cell phone,” he invented the world's first portable cell phone at Motorola and made the first public call in 1973. Over thirty years at Motorola, Cooper and his teams introduced the first nationwide mobile phones and pagers, and numerous other products. He and his wife, Arlene Harris founded over a half dozen companies.He is chairman of Dyna LLC, serves on the FCC's Technological Advisory Council and is a member of the National Academy of Engineers, the Marconi Society, and is a Prince of Asturias Laureate. He has been widely published, and created the Law of Spectrum Capacity, known as Cooper's Law.Cooper grew up in Chicago and attended the Illinois Institute of Technology. Please leave a review or send us a Voice note letting us know what you enjoyed at:Back2Basics reconnecting to the essence of YOU (podpage.com)Follow us on IG and FB @Back2BasicsPodcast
You need more books in your life. So here are three authors to shout about theirs and enthuse about their research. This time we have three academics. (Next time we'll have three presenters/producers, covering music radio, Radio 4's Sunday and Doctor Who...) But this is a different episode of The Three Doctors. And they are… DR CAROLYN BIRDSALL, Associate Professor of Media Studies at the University of Amsterdam + author of Radiophilia (Bloomsbury, 2023): https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/radiophilia-9781501374968/ She tells us about the love of radio, 'wireless-itis', and the early days of radio fandom. DR MARTIN COOPER, Assistant Subject Leader Emeritus at the University of Huddersfield + author of Radio's Legacy in Popular Culture: The Sounds of British Broadcasting over the Decades (Bloomsbury, 2023): https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/radios-legacy-in-popular-culture-9781501388231/ He tells us about some of the books, films and songs that feature radio, from Death at Broadcasting House fo James Joyce to Bob the Builder. DR JOSH SHEPPERD, Assistant Professor of Media Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder + author of Shadow of the New Deal: The Victory of Public Broadcasting (University of Illinois Press, 2023): https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/9780252087257 He tells us about the origin story of education & public radio in the US, from the first WWI university broadcasts to ex-BBC emigre Charles Siepmann (who worked under BBC Talks Director Hilda Matheson in the 1920s - it all links back...). In telling these tales chronologically, we mix and match between these three wise doctors. So expect a story of rural reach, radio hams and Professor Branestawm as we dovetail in and out of our experts. It's a bit like retuning and cruising up and down that dial... Original music by Will Farmer. This is an independent podcast, nothing to do with the BBC or anyone else for that matter. Details of Paul's tour of An Evening of (Very) Old Radio at www.paulkerensa.com/tour Find us on Facebook or Twitter, or Ex-Twitter. Join us on Patreon.com/paulkerensa, from £5/mth, and get written updates and videos... ...such as this video (free for all) - in which I read my 1923 copy of the Radio Times, exactly 100 years on from when it was on news-stands: https://youtu.be/kbtEhWg7fUY?si=h6nQToLhaVlkIQxY If you can rate/review the podcast nicely somewhere, maybe where you get podcasts normally, I'll be hugely appreciative. This is a one-man band of a show, so your amplification of it is the only thing getting it out there. THANKS! Next time? Three more authors. Then it's our Christmas special: The First Religious Broadcast: Re-staged where it began. Stay tuned. paulkerensa.com/oldradio
Join us as we revisit my conversation with Martin Cooper, the visionary engineer who conceived the handheld mobile phone. From concept to groundbreaking call in 1973, we'll take you on a journey through his revolutionary story.Highlights:Segment 1: The Visionary ConceptExplore Martin's early background and the spark that ignited the mobile phone idea. Uncover the condensed ten-year process behind this game-changing invention.Segment 2: Paving The WayDiscover how Martin's vision evolved into the iconic Motorola DynaTAC 8000x. Navigate the challenges overcome on the path to innovation.Segment 3: A Call That Shaped HistoryRelive the historic first public cell phone call and its lasting impact.Follow the Show on Social Media!Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EyewitnessHistoryTwitter: https://twitter.com/EyewitnessPodThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5351305/advertisement
Has anyone ever told you that you spend too much time on your cell phone? How about the inventor of the cell phone?Mr. Martin Cooper pioneered and placed the very first call from a handheld cell phone back in 1973 and you'd think he want you to spend as much time as possible on the thing he invented, right? Not quite!
Sometimes we get nerdy. Sometimes we get very nerdy. This episode is one of those where media meets politics meets history - and we're giving you all the nit-picking details, because if we don't, who will?! We only pass this way once... ...And by 'this way', I mean April 16th-24th 1923. On our previous episode, the five-month-old BBC was almost on its last legs, facing battles from the press (the Express) and the government (a feisty Postmaster General who doesn't feel generous with the licence fee). Now episode 71 sees the BBC discussed in the House of Commons, as two debates introduce the Sykes Inquiry, and see MPs debate, debase, defend and potentially defund the BBC. (A reminder: this was 1923, not 2023.) To bring this to life, we've revisited the Hansard parliamentary record of precisely what was said, and reunited (or recruited) our Podcast Parliamentary Players. So you'll hear: Neil Jackson - Mr Ammon Alexander Perkins - Lt Col Moore-Brabazon Lou Sutcliffe, David Monteath, Paul Hayes, Fay Roberts, Tom Chivers - Postmaster General Sir William Joynson-Hicks (aka Jix) Shaun Jacques - Sir William Bull, Mr Pringle Gordon Bathgate - Ramsay Macdonald, Sir Douglas Newton Steve Smallwood - Captain Benn Jamie Medhurst - Captain Berkeley Carol Carman - Mr Jones Andrew Barker - Mystery Speaker Wayne Clarke - Mr Speaker, J.H. Whitley ...and apologies if I've missed anyone out! It's quite possible. If you'd like to follow along (why would you?), the text of the two debates are here: April 19th 1923: https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1923-04-19/debates/8b3a8bd2-60c2-4c76-9e51-27c86098693f/BroadcastingLicences?highlight=experimental#contribution-276dc9d5-9f73-4623-867f-57e71dd74a1e April 24th 1923: https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1923-04-24/debates/9eb32788-f7a5-4f00-b2e5-a3207e5713bf/WirelessBroadcasting?highlight=experimental#contribution-7d5744c5-1c76-49d8-848e-858b0f275df7 OTHER LINKS: The text of Peter Eckersley's on-air engineering talk (thanks to Andrew Barker): https://www.facebook.com/groups/bbcentury/posts/624629565774834/ (Join our Facebook group!) This episode contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v.3.0 Oh and we're nothing to do with the BBC. We're talking about the old BBCompany, and not made by the present-day BBCorporation. Apologies we were going to feature Dr Martin Cooper - but the debates over-ran! Soon, Martin, with apologies. Meanwhile, buy his book: https://amzn.to/44eSXIM Music by Will Farmer Support us on Patreon.com/paulkerensa Rate/review us where you found this podcast? Paul's tour on old radio: Paulkerensa.com/tour Thanks for listening, if you do. This one's a bit heavy! NEXT TIME: The first radio dramatist - The Truth about Phyllis Twigg paulkerensa.com/oldradio
Episode 70 is a biggie. In April 1923, the five-month-old BBC faced a two-pronged attack. The Daily Express ran an anti-BBC campaign, with front page stories questioning its existence, and even offering to take over broadcasting themselves. Over the course of one week, the Express applied to the government for a broadcast licence (and were turned down). Meanwhile the Postmaster General's chance encounter with Reith in the street brought to a head 'the licence problem'. Reith wanted more £ for the BBC; the govt wanted more £ for themselves. It's a hundred years' war that's still raging, so it's the ideal episode to bring in Prof Patrick Barwise and Peter York, authors of The War Against the BBC: How an Unprecedented Combination of Hostile Forces is Destroying Britain's Greatest Cultural Institution... And Why You Should Care. Their insight in 2023's BBC battles tell us of right-wing press ('SMET': Sun, Mail, Express, Telegraph), now joined by GB News and Talk TV, plus think tanks galore doing down Auntie Beeb. This is all coupled with cuts in funding that is starting to affect output, from local radio to orchestras to the merged news channel. April 5th-15th 1923 is perhaps just the beginning then... Buy Patrick Barwise and Peter's York book The War Against the BBC: https://amzn.to/3qX6bLB Read their article for Prospect Magazine: 'We have bad news for the right-wing BBC haters: most of the public just don't agree with you.' https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/60479/attention-bbc-haters-the-public-arent-behind-you See Paul Kerensa on tour with 'An Evening of (Very) Old Radio': www.paulkerensa.com/tour More info on Paul's forthcoming novel Auntie and Uncles: www.paulkerensa.com/book Original music is by Will Farmer. Broadcasts more than 50 years old are generally out of copyright. Any BBC content is used with kind permission, BBC copyright content reproduced courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved. Thanks for supporting on www.patreon.com/paulkerensa if you do - videos and writings await you there. Or one-off tips are much appreciated too! www.ko-fi.com/paulkerensa. Do rate and review us - 5 stars would be lovely, thanks! We're here to inform, educate and entertain - though as ever we are nothing to do with the present-day BBC. We're just talking about them, not made by them. Next time... Episode 71 - Today in Parliament: The BBC Debates of April 1923, plus Dr Martin Cooper on radio in popular culture. www.paulkerensa.com/oldradio
Fifty years on from the first mobile phone call, this programme examines how the device has revolutionised the way we lives our lives. It was 1973 when Martin Cooper, a Motorola researcher made the first mobile phone call to his rival at Bell Labs. The prototype weighed 2 kilograms and measured 23 by 13 by 4.5 centimetres. It offered a talk time of just 30 mins and took 10 hours to recharge. Fast forward five decades and checking the phone is the first thing many people do when they wake up in the morning and the last thing they do when they go to bed. How has the mobile phone revolutionised the way we live our lives?
Do you like cell phones? I think they're great. We can use them anywhere! We can do many things with cell phones. We can call people. We can text our friends. We can take pictures. 手機可以幫我們打電話,傳簡訊,還有拍照。 The first cell phone was super big. It was heavy. It weighed one kilogram! People could only talk for 25 minutes. That is very short! 史上第一台手機有一公斤重,超級大又超級重!而且只能講25分鐘的電話。 Martin Cooper is called the 'father of the cell phone.' He made the world's first cell phone. He made it in 1973. That was 50 years ago! Martin Cooper 在 1973 年,也就是 50 年前,發明了世界上第一支手機,所以又被叫做「手機之父」。 Mr Cooper's cell phone was about 5,000 US dollars. That's over 150,000 NT dollars. 當時他製造的手機要賣5000美元左右,超過15萬台幣! Mr. Cooper is 94 years old now. He has a brand new cell phone. He is happy that people use cell phones. Mr. Cooper likes them. He uses lots of APPS! But he thinks people look at their cell phones way too much! Cooper 今年已經94歲了,他有一支新的手機,他很開心大家都在用手機,但他覺得大家用太久了! Some people eat dinner and look at their cell phones. They cross the street and look at their cell phones. That isn't good. A car can hit them. 有些人連吃飯跟過馬路的時候都在看手機,這樣很危險。 What do you think? Do people look at their cell phones too much? ________________________________ Vocabulary 手機已經有很多年的歷史,現代手機跟以前的大不一樣。 1. brand new 嶄新的 Come see my brand new bike. 你來看我全新的腳踏車。 Wow, it looks great! 哇,看起來很棒呢! 2. pay for 付錢 How much did you pay for it? 你花了多少錢買? About 40,000 NT. 大約四萬塊。 That's a lot of money for a bike. 以腳踏車來說很貴。 I know, but I'll make the most out of it. 我知道,不過我會儘量多用。 3. anywhere 任何地方 I'll take it anywhere I go. 我不管去哪裡都會騎。 Anywhere? It's quite heavy! 不管去哪裡? 它很重呢! But it's super easy to ride. 不過超好騎的。 4. think 想 I'm thinking of riding it up Yangmingshan. 我想騎上陽明山。 I'll go with you. In my car. 我跟你去。坐我的車去。 我們來讀單字。 brand new 嶄新的 pay for 付錢 anywhere 任何地方 think 想 ________________________________ Quiz 1. What is Mr. Cooper called? A: "Brother of the cell phone" B: "Father of the cell phone" C: "Uncle of the cell phone" 2. How many kilograms was the first cell phone? A: 1 B: 25 C: 50 3. What did Mr. Cooper say about cell phones? A: People look at them too much B: He doesn't have one C: People like them Answers 1. B 2. A 3. A
When telecoms engineer Martin Cooper first chatted in public on a mobile phone 50 years ago few would have predicted that this brief telephone call would be the start of a revolution that would change the lives of billions. Over the last half a century, the mobile has transformed not just how we communicate with each other but also how we view and interact with the world around us. However, recent research suggests that this may not all be for the best. Drawing on listeners comments and questions, Rajan Datar explores what sets the mobile phone apart from previous communication devices. Why did SMS messaging take off so quickly after a slow start in the 1990s? And how did the morphing of a portable phone into a pocket computer a decade later lead to a situation where many people now interact with their phone more than with any human? Rajan is joined by Scott Campbell, Professor of Telecommunications at the University of Michigan whose work focuses on meanings, uses and consequences of mobile communication in everyday life; behavioural psychologist Dr. Daria Kuss from Nottingham Trent University who specialises in cyberpsychology, technology use and addictive behaviours; and comedienne and PhD. candidate at Exeter University Helen Keen who is researching social connections at the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health. We also hear from educator Wong Fung Sing from Singapore and other listeners from around the world. (Photo: mobile phones in a stack on a table. Credit: iStock/Getty images)
Today's podcast: An Op-ed posted to The Conversation: “ChatGPT: Student insights are necessary to help universities plan for the future”. Guests: Alpha Abebe, assistant professor in the faculty of humanities at McMaster University & Fenella Amarasinghe, PhD Candidate, Faculty of Education, York University, Canada 50-Years-Ago this past Monday, the first cell phone call was made. Dr Martin Cooper used the first cell-phone call to troll his rival at AT&T. Since then, cellphone technology has evolved dramatically to the point where we essentially have a small computer inside our pocket. Though all that good also brings some bad in regards to the rise in spam calls. How much have we seen this technology grow? And are we winning in the war with the spam calls? Guest: Carmi Levy, technology analyst and journalist Op-Ed: First Target, Then Nordstrom – Why Do Big Retailers Keep Failing In Canada? Guest: David Soberman, Professor of Marketing, University of Toronto This past Monday, NASA announced the crew for the upcoming Artemis II mission, which will see astronauts on a flyby trip to the moon, marking the first time in over 50 years that humans leave low Earth orbit and visit the moon. Cdns especially are excited to hear that Cdn Astronaut Jeremy Hansen will be on that next flight to moon. Guest: Gordon Osinski, Earth Sciences professor at the University of Western Ontario and director of the Canadian Lunar Research Network --------------------------------------------- Host/Content Producer – Martin Strong Technical Producer – Phil Figueiredo Podcast Producer – Tom McKay If you enjoyed the podcast, tell a friend! For more of the Roy Green Show, subscribe to the podcast! https://globalnews.ca/roygreen/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
50-Years-Ago this past Monday, the first cell phone call was made. Dr Martin Cooper used the first cell-phone call to troll his rival at AT&T. Since then, cellphone technology has evolved dramatically to the point where we essentially have a small computer inside our pocket. Though all that good also brings some bad in regards to the rise in spam calls. How much have we seen this technology grow? And are we winning in the war with the spam calls? Guest: Carmi Levy, technology analyst and journalist Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
American engineer and pioneer Martin Cooper joins Lisa Dent to discuss how 50 years ago this week he made history by making the very first cell phone call. During their conversation, Martin recounts the events of that first call and also hints that “the cell phone revolution has just begun.” Follow The Lisa Dent Show […]
Este 3 de abril se cumplieron 50 años de que Martin Cooper realizó la primera llamada pública desde un celular en la historia. Esta llamada se hizo en la Sexta Avenida de Manhattan. A medio siglo de distancia, ¿qué significa para ti el celular? ¿Qué pasaría si por un día no usas tu celular? ¿Qué tanto dependes de tu aparato móvil? Evelyn Linares, vocera del Seguro Social, nos habla de los Beneficios del Seguro Social en riesgo a partir de 2034. Dr. Carlos Suárez Plascencia, profesor investigador del Departamento de Geografía, habla sobre que Estados Unidos es “líder” mundial en catástrofes climáticas Como todos los martes en nuestro querido segmento, Mariana Rosales, Empresaria, deportista, diseñadora nos habla del mes de abril como el mes del planeta Tierra En Contacto Deportivo, Aldo Sánchez nos acompaña para hablar de lo acontecido en la NHL, MLB y NBA, además de la actualidad del fútbol mexicano con Expansión, Liga MX Femenil y varonil. Mañana más, en Buenos Días América, no olvides en conectarte. Si te gusto, recuerda compartir con tus amigos que pueden encontrarnos en la App de UFORIA o en cualquier plataforma de podcast. Envíanos tus comentarios, inquietudes o sugerencias, a nuestras redes sociales en Facebook @buenosdiasam, Instagram buenosdiasamericaam o escríbenos a nfoudradio@UNIVISION.NET estaríamos encantados de recibirlas.
Motorola executive Martin Cooper was standing on Sixth Avenue just blocks from Radio City Music Hall in Manhattan on April 3, 1973 — 50 years ago today — when he dialed his Chicago-built cellphone prototype. Kori Rumore brings her encyclopedic knowledge of all things Chicago to share the Windy City connections to this historic event and some of the inspirations behind Motorola's iconic "brick phone". Subscribe to the Vintage Tribune and get Chicago history to your inbox every Thursday.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
*) Oil prices jump after OPEC+ cuts daily production by more than a million barrels Oil prices have soared almost six percent in Asian trade after major producers led by Saudi Arabia announced a surprise cut of more than one million barrels per day. The move led by Saudi Arabia will be in effect from next month until the end of the year, and marks the biggest reduction in output since the OPEC plus slashed two million barrels per day in October. The reduction came on top of a Russian decision to extend a cut of 500,000 barrels per day, and in spite of US calls to increase production. The announcement is expected to fan fresh fears about inflation and put more pressure on central banks to hike interest rates further. *) Wagner group claims it captured Bakhmut; Ukraine denies report The head of pro-Russian Wagner mercenary group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has claimed that his forces have captured Ukraine's Bakhmut, raising the Russian flag over the city's administration building. In a message posted on Telegram, Prigozhin said that "from a legal point of view” Bakhmut has been taken. Prigozhin has previously made claims that were premature. Ukraine's army also denied the report saying it still "holds" the city. In a video address on Sunday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy gave no indication that the city had fallen, saying fighting remained “particularly hot”. *) Finland's centre-right National Coalition Party claims election victory Finland's centre-right opposition National Coalition Party leader Petteri Orpo has claimed victory in the Nordic country's tightly-fought parliamentary election on Sunday. With 99 percent of votes counted, the centre-right was credited with 48 of the 200 seats in parliament, the far-right with 46 and the Social Democrats with 43. The biggest party in parliament traditionally gets the first chance to build a government, and since the 1990s that party has always claimed the prime minister's office. Prime Minister Sanna Marin who secured for Finland a NATO membership, has conceded defeat and congratulated the victorious conservatives, saying “democracy has spoken." *) Milatovic wins Montenegro presidency beating veteran leader In another election-related development, Montenegro's former minister of economic development Jakov Milatovic has won the country's presidential runoff, according to results from a leading pollster, beating long-time leader Milo Djukanovic in a landslide. The Center for Monitoring and Research said Milatovic won around 60 percent while Djukanovic won around 40 percent. Official results are not expected before Monday. Analysts said the results could change slightly as the vote count progresses but that the gap between the two is too wide for major changes. Djukanovic's defeat on Sunday means that both he and his party will be in opposition for the first time since late 1980s'. And finally… *) The mobile phone turns 50 Today marks the 50th anniversary since the first mobile phone call was made on April 3, 1973. From brick-sized handsets popular with stockbrokers to intensely powerful computers that sit in all our pockets today, mobile phones have been forged by a half-century of innovation. Martin Cooper is the man who developed the technology and made the first call using a Motorola phone. Cooper is now 94 years old and uses the latest iPhone. However, he said that the world has become too obsessed with his invention. He confessed that he will “never, ever understand” how to use the cell phone the way his grandchildren and great-grandchildren do.
Le 3 avril 1973, dans les rues de New-York, un certain Martin Cooper, ingénieur chez Motorola, passait les premier coup de fil avec un portable ! Retour sur une saga qui nous a transformé en zombies !
50 years ago today, Motorola engineer Martin Cooper stood on a corner of Sixth Avenue, took a phone book from his pocket and made the first mobile phone call in history. So how much has the mobile phone improved our lives? And is being constantly contactable always a good thing? Bobby Kerr was joined by Pat Phelan, co-founder and CEO of Sisu Clinic and Ali Ryan, CEO of Goss.ie…
The cell phone revolutionized how we communicate with each other, but its origins are extremely different from the device you use to talk, text and even surf the internet with on a daily basis. Its roots could be traced back to the early 1970s when the head of Motorola's communications systems division, Martin Cooper was tasked with developing a device that would make the up and coming car phone obsolete technology. On April 3, 1973, Cooper made the very first handheld cell phone call while standing on Sixth Avenue outside the New York City Hilton in midtown Manhattan to engineer Joel Engel, head of AT&T's rival project. In a conversation with Al Pisano, Dean of UC San Diego's Jacobs School of Engineering, Cooper reflects on the past fifty years including what it took to develop the world's first cellular telephone, the impact it's had on the world and the future of smartphone technology. Series: "Computer Science Channel" [Science] [Show ID: 38819]
The cell phone revolutionized how we communicate with each other, but its origins are extremely different from the device you use to talk, text and even surf the internet with on a daily basis. Its roots could be traced back to the early 1970s when the head of Motorola's communications systems division, Martin Cooper was tasked with developing a device that would make the up and coming car phone obsolete technology. On April 3, 1973, Cooper made the very first handheld cell phone call while standing on Sixth Avenue outside the New York City Hilton in midtown Manhattan to engineer Joel Engel, head of AT&T's rival project. In a conversation with Al Pisano, Dean of UC San Diego's Jacobs School of Engineering, Cooper reflects on the past fifty years including what it took to develop the world's first cellular telephone, the impact it's had on the world and the future of smartphone technology. Series: "Computer Science Channel" [Science] [Show ID: 38819]
The cell phone revolutionized how we communicate with each other, but its origins are extremely different from the device you use to talk, text and even surf the internet with on a daily basis. Its roots could be traced back to the early 1970s when the head of Motorola's communications systems division, Martin Cooper was tasked with developing a device that would make the up and coming car phone obsolete technology. On April 3, 1973, Cooper made the very first handheld cell phone call while standing on Sixth Avenue outside the New York City Hilton in midtown Manhattan to engineer Joel Engel, head of AT&T's rival project. In a conversation with Al Pisano, Dean of UC San Diego's Jacobs School of Engineering, Cooper reflects on the past fifty years including what it took to develop the world's first cellular telephone, the impact it's had on the world and the future of smartphone technology. Series: "Computer Science Channel" [Science] [Show ID: 38819]
The cell phone revolutionized how we communicate with each other, but its origins are extremely different from the device you use to talk, text and even surf the internet with on a daily basis. Its roots could be traced back to the early 1970s when the head of Motorola's communications systems division, Martin Cooper was tasked with developing a device that would make the up and coming car phone obsolete technology. On April 3, 1973, Cooper made the very first handheld cell phone call while standing on Sixth Avenue outside the New York City Hilton in midtown Manhattan to engineer Joel Engel, head of AT&T's rival project. In a conversation with Al Pisano, Dean of UC San Diego's Jacobs School of Engineering, Cooper reflects on the past fifty years including what it took to develop the world's first cellular telephone, the impact it's had on the world and the future of smartphone technology. Series: "Computer Science Channel" [Science] [Show ID: 38819]
On April 3, 1973, an engineer named Martin Cooper stood nervously along a busy midtown Manhattan street, about to make a phone call. It was a call that would change life as we know it: The first cell phone call ever. The phone Cooper used that day — a prototype — was a bulky, 2-pound monster that looked a bit like a shoe with an antenna sticking out of the top. In the half-a-century since, this technology has changed more about the way we communicate and connect than Cooper could've ever imagined. On this episode, we mark the 50th anniversary of the first cell call with an exploration of the past, present, and future of mobile communications. We hear about Cooper's work on this world-altering invention, one community's fight against the 5G revolution, and why satellite phones are making a comeback in a big way.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
On April 3, 1973, an engineer named Martin Cooper stood nervously along a busy midtown Manhattan street, about to make a phone call. It was a call that would change life as we know it: The first cell phone call ever. The phone Cooper used that day — a prototype — was a bulky, 2-pound monster that looked a bit like a shoe with an antenna sticking out of the top. In the half-a-century since, this technology has changed more about the way we communicate and connect than Cooper could've ever imagined. On this episode, we mark the 50th anniversary of the first cell call with an exploration of the past, present, and future of mobile communications. We hear about Cooper's work on this world-altering invention, one community's fight against the 5G revolution, and why satellite phones are making a comeback in a big way.
The man credited with inventing the cellphone 50 years ago had only one concern then about the brick-sized device with a long antenna: Would it work? These days Martin Cooper frets like everybody else about his invention's impacts on society — from the loss of privacy to the risk of internet addiction to the rapid spread of harmful content, especially among kids. “My most negative opinion is we don't have any privacy anymore because everything about us is now recorded someplace and accessible to somebody who has enough intense desire to get it,” said Cooper, who spoke with The Associated Press at the telecom industry's biggest trade show in Barcelona, where he was receiving a lifetime award. Yet the 94-year-old self-described dreamer also marvels at how far cellphone design and capabilities have advanced, and he believes the technology's best days may still be ahead of it in areas such as education and health care. Cooper, whose invention was inspired by Dick Tracy's radio wristwatch, said he also envisions a future in which cellphones are charged by human bodies. It's a long way from where he started. Cooper made the first public call from a handheld portable telephone on a New York City street on April 3, 1973, using a prototype that his team at Motorola had started designing only five months earlier. To needle the competition, Cooper used the Dyna-TAC prototype — which weighed 2.5 pounds and was 11 inches long — to call to his rival at Bell Labs, owned by AT&T. “The only thing that I was worried about: ‘Is this thing going to work?' And it did,” he said. The call helped kick-start the cellphone revolution, but looking back on that day Cooper acknowledges, “we had no way of knowing this was the historic moment.” While he dreams about what the future might look like, Cooper is attuned to the industry's current challenges, particularly around privacy. As for his own phone use, Cooper says he checks email and does online searches for information to settle dinner table arguments. This article was provided by The Associated Press.
Les journées mondiales sans téléphone portable s'achèvent : et vous, avez-vous tenu trois jours sans ? En 1876, l'américain Graham Bell dépose le brevet pour l'invention du téléphone. Près d'un siècle plus tard, c'est encore un ingénieur américain, Martin Cooper, qui invente en 1973 le téléphone portable. Le 3 avril 1973 précisément, un appel-test est passé à New York. Le jeune ingénieur de Motorola a le sens de l'humour : il appelle son ennemi juré de l'époque, Joel Engel, son rival chez le concurrent Bell Labs (ceux qui avaient justement inventé le téléphone de voiture).
On this weeks episode of The Becoming a Champion Show, Coach Dana Cavalea sits down with the inventor of the cell phone, Martin Cooper. Martin is the original inventor of the cell phone which we all know has changed the world! He talks about staying curious and always learning. Martin Cooper is in his 90s and continues to learn, grow, and think big! He also has a new book out called: CUTTING THE CORD Join our daily blog at: https://danacavalea.com/blogs/train-like-a-pro Come hang with Coach.... Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coachdanacavalea Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealcoachd/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danacavalea/ Order Coach's New Book, Habits of a Champion Team: https://www.amazon.com/Habits-Champion-Team-Formula-Business/dp/B09JJKG3YT/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1667819351&sr=8-1
As the BBC turns 100, enjoy 100 Years in 100 Minutes! This is just part 1, 1922-54 - from the company years of Magnet House then Savoy Hill, to the corporation years up to the eve of commercial competition, the last time the BBC was the sole official broadcaster. For the early years, enjoy the archive clips, some very rare - from the first presenters, John Reith and early performers. As time goes on, extracts give way to insights: from experts, podcast listeners and those who were there... YOU HAVE BEEN LISTENING TO: 1920s: John Reith, Arthur Burrows, Kreisler's Liebesleid (first music on the BBC), A.E. Thompson, Leonard Hawke (Drake Goes West - first music from London), Charles Penrose (The Laughing Policeman), Helena Millais as Our Lizzie, Rev John Mayo, Rev Archibald Fleming, Harold Bishop, Cecil Lewis?, Peter Eckersley, Kathleen Garscadden, Lord Gainford, Dr Kate Murphy, Dr Andrea Smith, Archibald Haddon, Marion Cran, Percy Scholes?, Justin Webb, Nightingale and Cello, Rev Dick Sheppard (first broadcast service), Richard Hughes' Danger (first play), A.J. Alan, King George V, Alan Stafford, Tommy Handley, John Henry and Blossom, Dr Martin Cooper, Harry Graham, Arthur Phillips, Filson Young, H.L. Fletcher, Flotsam and Jetsam, Christopher Stone, Henry Wood, Prof David Hendy, Vita Sackville-West, Clapham and Dwyer, Mabel Constanduros, Toytown 1930s: Norman Long and Stanelli, Harold Nicolson, Simon Rooks, Val Gielgud, Gillie Potter, Henry Hall and the BBC Dance Orchestra, King George VI, Gerald Cock, Elisabeth Welch, Caroll Gibbons and the Savoy Orpheans, Lew Stone, Murgatroyd and Winterbottom, Nelson Keys, Sandy Powell, The Western Brothers, Stuart Hibberd, Charles Siepmann, King Edward VIII, Elizabeth Cowell, Tommy Woodroffe, Bandwaggon, ITMA (Mrs Mopp), Neville Chamberlain, John Snagge 1940s: J.B. Priestley, Winston Churchill, Music While You Work, Edward Stourton, Charles Gardner, Bruce Belfrage, Princess Elizabeth, C.S. Lewis, Stephen Bourne, Una Marson, Nightingale and the Bomber, Charles Huff, Lilliburlero, Romany, Richard Dimbleby, Edward R Murrow, Frank Gillard, Guy Byam, Johnny Beerling, George Elrick, Norman Shelley, Michael Standing, Paul Hayes 1950s: Jeffrey Holland, Julia Lang, Roger Bolton. (...+ various unknown announcers) FURTHER LINKS: Like what we do? Share it! We're on facebook.com/bbcentury, with a separate group on facebook.com/groups/bbcentury, and (while it lasts) on twitter.com/bbcentury. Tag us in, let people know you listen. Love what we do? Support us at patreon.com/paulkerensa The novel based on this podcast is due out in February 2023: Auntie and Uncles - details here: https://amzn.to/3hxe4lX We look forward to continuing to unpack this century of broadcasting in our usual slower way on the podcast. But next time, join us for part 2 (1955-87) and part 3 (1988-2022). paulkerensa.com/oldradio
Martin Cooper is an engineer, inventor, entrepreneur, and futurist. He isknown as the “father of the cell phone.” He led the creation of the world's first cell phone atMotorola—and made the first public call on it. Over nearly three decades at Motorola, Coopercontributed to the development of pagers, two-way radio dispatch systems, quartz crystalmanufacture, and more.A serial entrepreneur, he and his wife, Arlene Harris, have cofounded numerous wirelesstechnology companies. This includes Cellular Business Systems, SOS WirelessCommunications, GreatCall, and ArrayComm. Cooper is currently chairman of Dyna LLCand a member of the FCC's Technological Advisory Council. He was the first to observe theLaw of Spectrum Capacity, which became known as Cooper's Law.In 2013, Cooper became a member of the National Academy of Engineering from whom hereceived the Charles Stark Draper Prize for Engineering. He was awarded the Marconi Prize“for being a wireless visionary who reshaped the concept of mobile communication.” He hasbeen inducted into the Consumer Electronics Hall of Fame and Wireless History Foundation'sWireless Hall of Fame. The Radio Club of America awarded him a Lifetime AchievementAward in 2010. He is a lifetime member of the IEEE, was president of its VehicularTechnology Society and received its Centennial Medal. In 2007, Time magazine named himone of the “100 Best Inventors in History.” He is a Prince of Asturias Laureate.
Martin Cooper invented the cell phone and change the entire world while doing so. He talks about the first ever phone call, promotional stunts, whether or not he's rich and so much more.
現代生活似乎少不了手機,有些人甚至從早用到晚,連走路也在滑手機。然而,發明手機的美國工程師庫珀(Martin Cooper)卻勸世人放下手機,不要浪費時間,好好過自己的生活。 更多內容請見:https://www.epochtimes.com/b5/22/7/15/n13781301.htm 大纪元,大纪元新闻,大紀元,大紀元新聞, 手機, 生活, 滑手機, 發明, 摩托羅拉
PBD Podcast Episode 170. In this episode, Patrick Bet-David is joined by John Paul Mac Isaac, Martin Cooper, Vincent Oshana, and Adam Sosnick. John Paul's legal defense provided by The America Project: https://bit.ly/3IrFyTw Buy John Paul Mac Isaac's book "American Injustice": https://amzn.to/3c3oJSK Donate to John Paul's Give Send Go campaign: https://bit.ly/3ayb8Te Buy Martin Cooper's book "Cutting the Cord": https://amzn.to/3ItnJmW Download the podcasts on all your favorite platforms https://bit.ly/3sFAW4N Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get added to the distribution list Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. To reach the Valuetainment team you can email: booking@valuetainment.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/pbdpodcast/support
Martin Cooper is the inventor of the world's first cellphone and he was asked on "BBC Breakfast" what he thought of people who are on their phones for hours. A video is going viral of a DJ playing a very unfortunate song to a prom queen who happens to be in a wheelchair. Remember back in May when Axl Rose joined Carrie Underwood in concert at Stagecoach? Well now Carrie has returned the favor. Is This Anything? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
È il 3 aprile 1973 quando Martin Cooper, su una strada di New York, prende il suo telefono cellulare e chiama il suo rivale. La rivoluzione tecnologica era dietro l'angolo, ma nessuno poteva sapere chi sarebbe arrivato prima all'invenzione che cambierà il mondo
About the episodeSean and Kevin make their case for who belongs on the Mount Rushmore of Creativity in the world of pop culture and entertainment media. Considering the wide field of writers, directors, musicians, actors, and other filmmakers, will they be able to narrow it down to just for each. Tune in to listen as they pitch their perfect quartet to each other, and find out if anyone ranks so highly on the list for both.Resources & linksFirst movie ever made is “The Horse In Motion” (1878) and the earliest surviving motion-picture film is “Roundhay Garden Scene” (1888). Shot by French inventor Louis Le Prince and is only 2.11 seconds longFirst cartoon (by traditional methods) - “Fantasmagorie” (1908) by French artist Emile Cohl First comic - “The Adventures of Mr. Obadiah Oldbuck” (published in 1837) by Swiss caricaturist Rodolphe Topffer in Geneva SwitzerlandFirst song recorded - “Au Clair de la Lune” (1860) by inventor Edouard-Leon Scot de Martinville in ParisFirst mobile phone call made - 1973 by Martin Cooper, a Motorola researcher, and executiveMovie with the highest-earning - Avatar (2009) over $2.847BHighest Earning Animated Movie - Incredibles 2 (2018) $608.5MMusic album that has sold the most copies - Thriller by Michael Jackson (1982) 67M copies soldMost expensive comic book ever sold - 1962 Amazing Fantasy No. 15Will SmithDolly PartonBruce LeeWalt DisneyElton JohnLucille BallJon FavreauThe Captioned Life Podcast website Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
EPISODE 41, SEASON 2: Karen Suen-Cooper and Martin Cooper are world-known fashion designers, consummate hosts, and co-Founders of The Punctilious Mr. P's Place Cards Company. As the holiday season approaches, we explore the art of gathering and how we can “make sure to elevate, celebrate and honor the people we choose to spend time with and our shared experience.”ABOUT THE SERIES: Future of XYZ is a weekly interview series dedicated to fostering forward-thinking discussions about where we are as a world and where we want to go. FOR MORE INFORMATION: Visit future-of.xyz and follow on social media... LinkedIn: @lisagralnek, @lvg-co-strategy | Twitter: @lgralnek | IG: @futureofxyz
Dr. Martin Cooper, leader of the team that invented the first cell phone, shares secrets to raising results. "Marty" draws from his team's race to create true mobile communications (recorded via cell phone, of course, so try my youtube-channel version with quotes at Bold Breakthroughs - Mark Spencer Cook).