Login

    Sections
    Search

    • Politics
    • Economics & Finance
    • Business & Entrepreneurship
    • Art & Culture
    • Science & Technology
    • Environment & Climate Change
    • World
    • World Leaders
    • The Americas
    • Europe
    • Middle East & North Africa
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • United States
    • India
    • China
    • Russia
    • About
    • Authors
    • Publications
    • Events
    • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
    • Events
    • Russia
    • Publications
    • Authors
    • About
    Fair Observer

    MULTIMEDIA

    The Indian Subcontinent’s Hindu-Muslim Divide

    Fair Observer

    VIDEOS

    FO Talks: Decoding Mark Carney’s Davos Speech Amid Rising Global Strategic Competition

    Fair Observer

    PODCASTS

    The Dialectic: Narendra Modi’s Vegetarian Stalinism Has Ruined the Indian Economy

    PUBLICATION

    Fair Observer Monthly: January 2026

    Support Fair Observer

    We rely on your support for our independence, diversity and quality.

    Donate
    Search
    Fair Observer Logo
    • Donate
    Fair Observer Logo
    Podcasts

    The Future Is Still Calling

    By Wade Roush
    Follow
    Follow
    Wade Roush
    @soonishpodcast
    SHARE
    May 10, 2021 12:50 EDT
    Check out our comment feature!

    Saved Successfully.

    This article saved into your bookmarks. Click here to view your bookmarks.

    My Bookmarks

    In 1973, there was only one man who believed everyone on Earth would want and need a cellphone. That man was a Motorola engineer named Martin Cooper.

    “I had a science fiction prediction,” Cooper recounts in his new memoir, “Cutting the Cord: The Inventor of the Cell Phone Speaks Out.” “I told anyone who would listen that, someday, every person would be issued a phone number at birth. If someone called and you didn’t answer, that would mean you had died.”

    Your email address or Facebook profile may have displaced your phone number as the marker of your digital existence. But today, we live — more or less — in the world Cooper conceived. So, if Cooper says the wireless revolution is still just in its opening stages, and that mobile technology promises to help end poverty and disease and bring education and employment to everyone, it’s probably worth listening.

    Embed from Getty Images

    In this episode of “Soonish,” we talk with Cooper about the themes and stories in his book, and we explore why even the disasters of 2020 haven’t shaken his optimism about the future.

    Before the 1970s, Motorola was known mainly for making the two-way radios used by police dispatchers and the AM/FM radios in the dashboards of cars. But Cooper, head of the company’s communication systems division, was convinced that the company’s future lay in battery-powered handheld phones tied to a network of radio towers, each broadcasting to its own “cell.” Moreover, he knew it would take a spectacular demonstration of such wireless technology to keep the Federal Communications Commission from giving AT&T the huge chunks of radio spectrum it wanted to build its own network of in-dashboard car phones.

    Cooper convinced his bosses to let him lead a crash, 90-day program to build a prototype cellular phone that it could show off to the media and the FCC. The project to build the DynaTAC (for Dynamic Adaptive Total Area Coverage) was a success and, in the end, AT&T never got the spectrum it wanted.

    It took another decade for Motorola to commercialize the technology, largely because of FCC foot-dragging over spectrum allocation for the consumer cellular industry. But Cooper’s 1973 demo opened the door to the world we now know — including, many generations of devices later, the rise of podcasting.

    Cooper is 92, and he still buys every new model of every brand of smartphone, just to try it out. He thinks there’s lots of room left for improvement — and that the next generation of mobile devices may not look like phones at all but will instead go inside our ears or even inside our bodies, where they’ll help to detect and prevent disease.

    When someone has had had a front-seat view to so many decades of high-tech innovation, perhaps they can’t help feeling rosy about humanity’s ability to think its way out of present-day challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change or inequality in educational and economic opportunities.

    “The problems are big enough so it’s going to take some time to get them solved,” Cooper says. “But there are people around who are doing the thinking and who are addressing these problems. Pretty much the only advantage the human brain has over machine is that it keeps making mistakes. And we call those mistakes creativity. So I think that’s going to save us.”

    Chapter Guide

        • 00:08 Soonish theme
        • 00:24 Officer of the Deck
        • 01:42 Left-Right Confusion
        • 04:06 The Father of the Cell Phone
        • 06:52 Geeking Out
        • 08:41 Living in the Future
        • 10:50 Disproving Technological Determinism
        • 17:19 An Alternative History of the Cell Phone
        • 19:45 The Fate of All Monopolies
        • 23:35 Midroll Announcement from The Lonely Palette
        • 24:46 Why Phone Makers Still Don’t Have It Right
        • 31:49 The Sources of Cooper’s Optimism
        • 37:42 End Credits and Acknowledgements
        • 39:19 Promo: Subtitle’s “We Speak” Miniseries

    *[“Soonish” is produced by Wade Roush. Click here for a full list of episodes.]

    The views expressed in this post are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

    Commenting Guidelines

    Please read our commenting guidelines before commenting.


    1. Be Respectful: Please be polite to the author. Avoid hostility. The whole point of Fair Observer is openness to different perspectives from perspectives from around the world.

    2. Comment Thoughtfully: Please be relevant and constructive. We do not allow personal attacks, disinformation or trolling. We will remove hate speech or incitement.

    3. Contribute Usefully: Add something of value — a point of view, an argument, a personal experience or a relevant link if you are citing statistics and key facts.

    Please agree to the guidelines before proceeding.

    More Episodes

    The Dialectic: Narendra Modi’s Vegetarian Stalinism Has Ruined the Indian Economy

    In this episode of The Dialectic, Atul Singh and Glenn Carle explain how India’s current leader has rolled back the...

    Glenn Carle & Atul Singh, February 12, 2026
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: Maduro, the War on Drugs and Trump’s Revival of the Monroe Doctrine

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Atul Singh and Benjamin Delille examine US President Donald Trump’s confrontation with Venezuela, questioning...

    Benjamin Delille & Atul Singh, January 18, 2026
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: Myanmar Votes During a Civil War: Why This Election Could Tear the Country Apart

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Rohan Khattar Singh and Asanga Abeyagoonasekera examine Myanmar’s December 28 elections against the backdrop...

    Asanga Abeyagoonasekera & Rohan Khattar Singh, January 6, 2026
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: The Forbidden C-word, Class in America

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Atul Singh and Kent Jenkins Jr. discuss how class shapes US identity and political...

    Kent Jenkins Jr. & Atul Singh, December 29, 2025
    Fair Observer

    Must Listen

    The Dialectic: France: The Eternal Crisis Strikes Again. What Now?

    In this episode of The Dialectic, Atul Singh and Glenn Carle examine France’s deepening polycrisis. Rising debt, political paralysis and...

    by Glenn Carle & Atul Singh, December 13, 2025
    Fair Observer

    The Dialectic: Can Germany Outgrow Its Postwar American Model?

    In this episode of The Dialectic, Atul Singh and Glenn Carle explore how Germany faces acute economic, political and social...

    by Glenn Carle & Atul Singh, December 2, 2025
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: The Right to Play: How Women Fought and Won the Battle for Equality in Sports

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Atul Singh and Lauren Greenberg explore how Title IX reshaped women’s sports and personal...

    by Lauren Greenberg & Atul Singh, November 26, 2025
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: Enemy of the Sun — How Palestinian Poetry Became a Weapon of Resistance

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Atul Singh and Edmund Ghareeb trace the unlikely journey of the Palestinian poetry anthology...

    by Edmund Ghareeb & Atul Singh, November 19, 2025
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: Why is the US Deporting Illegal Migrants to a Tiny African Nation Called Eswatini?

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Rohan Khattar Singh and Zweli Martin Dlamini examine the secret deportation deal between the...

    by Zweli Martin Dlamini & Rohan Khattar Singh, November 16, 2025
    Fair Observer

    The Dialectic: Can Germany and France Make Europe Great Again?

    In this episode of The Dialectic, Atul Singh and Glenn Carle examine Europe’s rise from Renaissance brilliance to post-World War...

    by Glenn Carle & Atul Singh, October 17, 2025
    Fair Observer

    Project 2025 and Donald Trump’s Dangerous Dismantling of the US Federal Government

    In this episode of The Dialectic, Atul Singh and Glenn Carle dissect US President Donald Trump’s destruction of federal institutions....

    by Glenn Carle & Atul Singh, September 9, 2025
    Fair Observer

    FO° Podcasts: Why Has Trump Deployed Thousands of National Guard Troops in Washington, DC?

    In this episode of FO° Podcasts, Atul Singh and Ankit Jain examine US President Donald Trump’s interventions in Washington, DC....

    by Ankit Jain & Atul Singh, September 8, 2025
    Fair Observer

     

    Fair Observer, 461 Harbor Blvd, Belmont, CA 94002, USA

    Sections

    • Politics
    • Economics & Finance
    • Business & Entrepreneurship
    • Art & Culture
    • Science & Technology
    • Environment & Climate Change
    • World Leaders
    • World
    • The Americas
    • Europe
    • Middle East & North Africa
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • United States
    • India
    • China
    • Russia
    • Events
    • Publications
    • Authors
    • About
    • Publish
    • Contact
    • Login
    Fair Observer

    MULTIMEDIA

    The Indian Subcontinent’s Hindu-Muslim Divide

    Fair Observer

    VIDEOS

    FO Talks: Decoding Mark Carney’s Davos Speech Amid Rising Global Strategic Competition

    Fair Observer

    PODCASTS

    The Dialectic: Narendra Modi’s Vegetarian Stalinism Has Ruined the Indian Economy

    PUBLICATION

    Fair Observer Monthly: January 2026

    Support Fair Observer

    We rely on your support for our independence, diversity and quality.

    Donate
    © Fair Observer All rights reserved
    Designed, Developed and Maintained by Netleon IT Solutions
    Fair Observer Education Logo Fair Observer Leadership Academy Logo

    BOOKMARK

    Want to save this post?
    Click to Login

    Support independent, crowdsourced, nonprofit journalism.

    Fair Observer is a 501(c)(3) independent nonprofit. We are not owned by billionaires or controlled by advertisers. We publish nearly 3,000 authors from over 90 countries after fact-checking and editing each piece. We do not have a paywall and anyone can read us for free. With your vital donations, we can continue to do our work.

    Please make a recurring (or even one-time) donation today. Even $1 goes a long way because a million donors like you mean one million dollars. Thank you for keeping us independent, free and fair.

    One Time Monthly Yearly

    Sign into your Fair Observer Account

    • Lost your password?
    Forgot Password

    Forgot Password

    Enter your registered email address or username. You will receive a link to create a new password via email.

    Please enter your username or email address. You will receive an email message with instructions on how to reset your password.

    • Log in

    Or
    Return to Login

    Forgot Password

    We have sent a link to your registered email address to reset your password.

    Back to Login

    Become a Member & Enjoy Exclusive Benefits!

    • Access to comments feature
    • Bookmark your favorite articles
    • Exclusive invitations to FO° Talks & FO° Live
    • Access to all of our e-publications
    Explore Membership
    Return to Login

    NEWSLETTER

    Make Sense of the World

    Unique Insights from 2,500+ Contributors in 90+ Countries

    NEWSLETTER

    Make Sense of the World

    Unique Insights from 2,500+ Contributors in 90+ Countries

    Fair observer

    Make Sense of the World

    Unique Insights from 2,500+ Contributors in 90+ Countries

    We Need Your Consent
    We use cookies to give you the best possible experience. Learn more about how we use cookies or edit your cookie preferences. Privacy Policy. My Options I Accept
    Privacy & Cookies Policy

    Edit Cookie Preferences

    The Fair Observer website uses digital cookies so it can collect statistics on how many visitors come to the site, what content is viewed and for how long, and the general location of the computer network of the visitor. These statistics are collected and processed using the Google Analytics service. Fair Observer uses these aggregate statistics from website visits to help improve the content of the website and to provide regular reports to our current and future donors and funding organizations. The type of digital cookie information collected during your visit and any derived data cannot be used or combined with other information to personally identify you. Fair Observer does not use personal data collected from its website for advertising purposes or to market to you.

    As a convenience to you, Fair Observer provides buttons that link to popular social media sites, called social sharing buttons, to help you share Fair Observer content and your comments and opinions about it on these social media sites. These social sharing buttons are provided by and are part of these social media sites. They may collect and use personal data as described in their respective policies. Fair Observer does not receive personal data from your use of these social sharing buttons. It is not necessary that you use these buttons to read Fair Observer content or to share on social media.

     
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    These cookies essential for the website to function.
    Social Media
    These cookies are used to enable sharing or following of content that you find interesting on our website. These settings apply to third-party social networking and other websites.
    Performance & Functionality
    These cookies are used to enhance the performance and functionality of our website. They provide statistics on how our website is used and help us improve by measuring errors. Certain functionalities on our website may become unavailable without these cookies.
    Analytics
    SAVE & ACCEPT

    Total Views: