Updated-October 2012 Name: Address: Telephone: Best Time-2025

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In 1945, forty-five percent of American households had a telephone. By 1957, that number had reached seventy-five percent, and by 1970, over 90 percent. In 2002, a majority of U.S. survey respondents reported having a mobile phone. In January 2013, a majority of U.S. survey respondents reported owning a smartphone.
But as cellphones became broadly available and affordable, many people chose to drop their landlines altogether. A 2022 survey by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that only about 29% of US adults lived in a house with a landline phone, down from more than 90% in 2004.
The landline in 1876, along with the telegraph a few decades earlier, revolutionized communications, leading leap by leap to the powerful computers tucked snugly in our pockets and purses today.
Advances in mobile telephony can be traced in successive generations from the early 0G services like MTS and its successor Improved Mobile Telephone Service, to first-generation (1G) analog cellular networks (1979), second-generation (2G) digital cellular networks (1991), third-generation (3G) broadband data
By the 1950s about two-thirds of American households had at least one telephone. At that time, people did not own their telephone, they rented it from the telephone company. Telephones had rotary dials and were either freestanding or wall mounted. Telephones were quite large by todays standards.