Cellular Telephone Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Cellular Telephone stocks.

Cellular Telephone Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 3 NVDA How This Egg Producer Beat Nvidia In IBD 50's First 6 Months Of 2024
Jul 3 NVDA Stock Market Today: S&P 500, Nasdaq Hit Highs Before Holiday, Jobs Report As Tesla, Nvidia Jump
Jul 3 NVDA Markets are in for a 'choppy' second half of 2024
Jul 3 NVDA Nvidia Has More Than Doubled This Year. How To Know When To Sell.
Jul 3 NVDA Nvidia has 3 under-the-radar rivals for AI chip supremacy
Jul 3 NVDA Retail Investors Are Dialing Back Buying Ahead of Earnings Season
Jul 3 NVDA S&P 500, Nasdaq close at new records in shortened session
Jul 3 NVDA Nvidia CEO takes advantage of YTD price surge, sells 1.3M shares
Jul 3 NVDA S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 Climb To Record Highs As Data Fosters Rate Cut Optimism Ahead Of Fed Minutes; Gold, Bonds Rally: What's Driving Markets Wednesday?
Jul 3 NVDA Hottest ETFs of 1H 2024
Jul 3 NVDA How Nvidia is boosting crypto 'DePin' projects like Akash to show AI isn't a bubble
Jul 3 NVDA Huang Cashes In on Nvidia’s Rally With $169 Million Share Sale
Jul 3 NVDA Nokia (NOK) Optimizes Network Infrastructure in Saudi Arabia
Jul 3 INTC What Is the Dividend Payout for Intel?
Jul 3 NVDA How Microsoft, Apple, and the Rest of Big Tech Have Made Up for Falling Nvidia Stock
Jul 3 NVDA Palantir's Peter Thiel Says It's 'Very Strange' That Most Money In AI Is Being Made By Only One Company
Jul 3 NVDA Super Micro Computer (SMCI) Up 194.5% YTD: Is it Worth Buying?
Jul 3 NVDA Nancy Pelosi discloses buys of Nvidia, Broadcom
Jul 3 NVDA Update: Market Chatter: Covert Network Sneaking Nvidia AI Chips into China, Evading US Restrictions
Jul 3 NVDA NVIDIA (NVDA) Up 147% YTD: Is It Too Late to Buy the Stock Now?
Cellular Telephone

A mobile phone, cell phone, cellphone, or hand phone, sometimes shortened to simply mobile, cell or just phone, is a portable telephone that can make and receive calls over a radio frequency link while the user is moving within a telephone service area. The radio frequency link establishes a connection to the switching systems of a mobile phone operator, which provides access to the public switched telephone network (PSTN). Modern mobile telephone services use a cellular network architecture, and, therefore, mobile telephones are called cellular telephones or cell phones, in North America. In addition to telephony, 2000s-era mobile phones support a variety of other services, such as text messaging, MMS, email, Internet access, short-range wireless communications (infrared, Bluetooth), business applications, video games, and digital photography. Mobile phones offering only those capabilities are known as feature phones; mobile phones which offer greatly advanced computing capabilities are referred to as smartphones.
The first handheld mobile phone was demonstrated by John F. Mitchell and Martin Cooper of Motorola in 1973, using a handset weighing c. 2 kilograms (4.4 lbs). In 1979, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) launched the world's first cellular network in Japan. In 1983, the DynaTAC 8000x was the first commercially available handheld mobile phone. From 1983 to 2014, worldwide mobile phone subscriptions grew to over seven billion—enough to provide one for every person on Earth. In first quarter of 2016, the top smartphone developers worldwide were Samsung, Apple, and Huawei, and smartphone sales represented 78 percent of total mobile phone sales. For feature phones (or "dumbphones") as of 2016, the largest were Samsung, Nokia, and Alcatel.

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