Does the mobile world need a new book? Yes it does. One that tells
the story of mobile from its early beginnings to the arrival of spread
spectrum and the third generation. A book that adds a little sex,
mystery and culture to that world by focusing on an invention by a film
star and a piano player back in the 1940s. A book that illuminates the
benefits of spread spectrum and throws more light on its mysterious
origins.
Rob Walters, the author of the new book, "Spread Spectrum: Hedy
Lamarr and the mobile phone," knows where the bodies are buried. He
delivered the first courses on UMTS and 3G in the UK and in many other
countries.
About his book he comments, "I was always intrigued by the role of
Hedy Lamarr in the evolution of spread spectrum - and so were my
students.
The involvement of a Hollywood film star certainly pepped up my
lectures and I am grateful to Hedy for that. I have tried to place her
role and that of her piano-playing partner in context within the
evolution of 3G.
It makes an interesting story."
Many inventors have had a role in the evolution of spread spectrum
technology, amongst them are Edwin Armstrong, most famous for his work
on frequency modulation and Claude Shannon the man who provided us with
a theory of information which underwrites all forms of communication in
noisy environments. However, the most exotic contributors to this
ubiquitous radio technology must be Hedy Lamarr and her piano playing
assistant George Antheil. Rob's book investigates their role in the
development of spread spectrum whilst outlining the evolution of radio
from its early days through to its use in mobile telephony and the
application of spread spectrum in the third generation.
She was an actress labelled by Hollywood as "the most beautiful girl
in the world" and was the first woman to appear entirely naked on the
silver screen. He was the self-named "bad boy of music" and the composer
of the Ballet Mecanique, a piece that shocked avant-garde Paris and
caused riots in the Carnegie Hall. So how the devil did this unlikely
pair come to invent something as important as spread spectrum? And, more
to the point, did they?
This book is essential reading for anyone involved in, or with an
interest in, mobile or the many applications in which spread spectrum is
currently deployed. It is not a deeply technical book and is therefore
accessible by anyone with an interest in the topic. On the other hand it
is not a fluffy book, it does have depth and carefully traces the
evolution of spread spectrum from its early implementations through to
its present popularity.
The book is all about Hedy and George and the many interesting people
involved in the evolution of the radio technology that we now called
spread spectrum. Along the way it picks up on some surprising twists in
the story of radio itself and of the mobile phone.
This book may change your image of invention and inventors. It will
certainly give you a glimpse into the life of a most unusual Hollywood
star and the life of a zany composer who excelled in the rarefied
atmosphere of 1920s Paris and then was himself drawn to Hollywood. It
will also give you a greater understanding of that most successful of
radio technologies - spread spectrum.