 
 On a "complexity per cubic inch" scale, Mobile phones are some of the most intricate devices people use on a daily basis. Modern digital Mobile phones can process millions of calculations per second in order to compress and decompress the voice stream.
If you take a basic digital Mobile phone apart, you find that it contains just a few individual parts:
- An amazing circuit board containing the brains of the phone
- An antenna
- A liquid crystal display (LCD)
- A keyboard (not unlike the one you find in a TV remote control)
- A microphone
- A speaker
- A battery
The circuit board is the heart of the system. Here is one from a typical Nokia digital phone: 
In the photos above, you see several computer chips. Let's talk about what some of the individual chips do. The analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog   conversion chips translate the outgoing audio signal from analog to   digital and the incoming signal from digital back to analog. You can   learn more about A-to-D and D-to-A conversion and its importance to   digital audio in How Compact Discs Work. The digital signal processor (DSP) is a highly customized processor designed to perform signal-manipulation calculations at high speed.
The microprocessor   handles all of the housekeeping chores for the keyboard and display,   deals with command and control signaling with the base station and also   coordinates the rest of the functions on the board.
The ROM and Flash memory chips provide storage for the phone's operating system and customizable features, such as the phone directory. The radio frequency (RF) and power section handles power management and recharging, and also deals with the hundreds of FM channels. Finally, the RF amplifiers handle signals traveling to and from the antenna.
The display & Keypad contacts
The   display has grown considerably in size as the number of features in   cell phones have increased. Most current phones offer built-in phone   directories, calculators and games. And many of the phones incorporate   some type of PDA or Web browser.
Some   phones store certain information, such as the SID and MIN codes, in   internal Flash memory, while others use external cards that are similar   to SmartMedia cards.
Cell  phones have such tiny  speakers and microphones that it is incredible  how well most of them  reproduce sound. As you can see in the picture  above, the speaker is  about the size of a dime and the microphone is no  larger than the watch  battery beside it. Speaking of the watch battery,  this is used by the  cell phone's internal clock chip.
What   is amazing is that all of that functionality-- which only 30 years ago   would have filled an entire floor of an office building--now fits into a   package that sits comfortably in the palm of your hand!
 











 
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