How do telecommunications work?

AI Thread Summary
Telecommunications rely on radio waves for signal transmission, with cell phones acting as receivers that filter out unwanted frequencies. Each phone operates on specific frequency bands, allowing it to ignore signals from other devices, such as neighbors' conversations, thereby minimizing interference. The design of cell phones includes advanced filtering technology that isolates the intended signal, ensuring clear communication. Additionally, signals can travel effectively from low locations, like basements, to high antennas due to the properties of radio waves, which can penetrate various materials and travel long distances. Understanding these principles is essential for grasping how modern telecommunications function.
Benoit
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How telecommunications work? I mean, there are so much waves around us nowadays, how my cellphone recognizes a single signal and rings only when it detects it? If my cellphone is a receipter, why can't I listen to my neighbor converstation, why isn't there a lot of interference and how waves, from my basement, successfully make their way to a very high antenna? I know I ask a lot, but I'm very curious and I know nothing.
 
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Benoit said:
If my cellphone is a receipter, why can't I listen to my neighbor converstation, why isn't there a lot of interference and how waves

Part of it is that your cell phone contains an electronic receiver that is capable of filtering out everything but a small band of frequencies that your own phone uses, so most of that interference is simply filtered out.
 
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It's clearer now, thanks!
 
This week, I saw a documentary done by the French called Les sacrifiés de l'IA, which was presented by a Canadian show Enquête. If you understand French I recommend it. Very eye-opening. I found a similar documentary in English called The Human Cost of AI: Data workers in the Global South. There is also an interview with Milagros Miceli (appearing in both documentaries) on Youtube: I also found a powerpoint presentation by the economist Uma Rani (appearing in the French documentary), AI...

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