Advanced Mobile Phone System North American analog cellular phone system Operates in the 800 MHz frequency band AMPs is used in South America and Asia Pacific It has not been deployed in Eastern Europe
Advanced Mobile Phone System: a 1G standard which operates in the 800-900MHz-frequency band It is still widely used in the United States 1G
Advanced Mobile Phone System The current analog cellular FM system in North America It uses 30 KHz channels and signaling is done superaudio
(Advanced Mobile Phone Service) The analog cellular mobile phone system in North and South America and more than 35 other countries It uses the FDMA transmission technology AMPS is the cellular equivalent of POTS
"Advanced Mobile Phone Service" - The analog celluar phone standard first introduced by AT&T in 1983 AMPS phones operate in the 800 to 900 Megahertz (MHz) radio spectrum The term is "cell" phone because the signals are sent from radio transmitters that cover a broadcast area known as a cell
Advanced Mobile Phone Service; commonly known as analog cellular that uses the 800 MHz spectrum AMPS service has been available in North America since the mid 80's and it is also available in Central and South America AMPS is quickly being phased out as more energy is needed to make and monitor for calls from a handset plus providers rather use the newer digital technologies that allow them to squeeze several callers onto one channel
Advanced Mobile Phone System The original American standard specification for analog systems Used primarily in North America, Latin America, Australia and parts of Russia and Asia
Acronym for Advanced Mobile Phone Service One of the original cellular phone services, relying on frequency-division multiplexing
Advanced Mobile Phone Service: The analog cellular air interface standard used in the United States and other countries
Advanced Mobile Phone Service, or analog cellular The operating standard or language for analog cell phone service
Advanced Mobile Phone System - an analog mobile phone network that is used mainly in the US and also Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, parts of Russia and Asia-Pacific Back to the top
Advanced Mobile Phone Service: The term used by AT&T's Bell Laboratories (prior to the break-up of the Bell System in 1984) to refer to its cellular technology It is commonly known as Analog (Back to top )
The most common type of analog cellular telephone system in the United States, operating at 800 MHz to 900 MHz Most of these first-generation (1G) systems have been or are being replaced by second-generation (2G) digital networks
Advanced Mobile Phone Service The standard for analog cellular telephones, which uses a frequency-modulated transmission and frequency spacing to separate user transmission AMPS operates in the 800 MHz band
Advanced Mobile Phone System The current analog cellular FM system in North America It uses 30 KHz channels and signaling is done superaudio Many Digital cell phones also include AMPS for use in areas where the cells do not cover
Ampere The unit of electrical current Also milliamp (one thousandth of an amp) and microamp (one millionth of an amp) One amp corresponds to the flow of about 6 x 1018 electrons per second
ACRONYM - A unit of electrical current or rate of flow of electrons through a conductor One volt across one ohm of resistance causes a current flow of one ampere One ampere is equal to 6 25 x 1018 electrons per second passing a set point in a circuit Ampere (099)
A unit that measures the strength/rate of flow of electrical current Armored Cable Electrical wires protected by metal sheathing Branch Circuits The circuits in a house that branch from the service panel to boxes and devices Breaker A switch-like device that connects/disconnects power to a circuit
1) An abbreviation of the term Amplifier (A device which increases the level of an electrical signal 2) An abbreviation of Ampere (the unit of current) 3) An abbreviation of amplitude (the height of a waveform above or below the zero line)
The standard unit of measurement of electrical current passing through a circuit Cables, fuses and switches are designated by their current carrying capacity
A unit of measurement of electric current used in quantifying the rate at which electrons flow past a given point in a wire The amount of current sent by one volt through a resistance of one ohm
A standard unit of electrical current Defined as the amount of current that flows when one volt of electromotive force is applied across one ohm of resistance