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Towering Technology of Paging

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From Associated Press

You call someone’s pager and it beeps. Simple.

But getting the call to the pager is a technological achievement of towering proportions--literally.

Suppose you need to reach your spouse somewhere within the area covered by your local paging service. You dial your spouse’s pager, a local telephone number.

The call is answered by the paging service company’s computer. You punch in your phone number and hang up. The computer relays the information to a radio transmitter, which sends it to a local radio tower, which broadcasts it on the sliver of radio wave band reserved for your spouse’s pager. The pager beeps and displays your phone number.

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For regional and nationwide paging, the signal is sent into outer space to be bounced off a satellite and broadcast throughout the service area.

Alphanumeric paging--words and numbers--requires human intervention. The caller either types the message into a computer attached to a phone line or speaks with an operator who does the typing.

It can take as little as 15 seconds to transmit a phone number. Alphanumeric messages take longer, but not usually more than three minutes.

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