Old School Fridays – Motorola DynaTAC “The Brick”

It’s Friday and that means it’s time for another round of Old School Fridays. Today we’ll be looking at the Motorola DynaTAC, othewise known as “the brick”. The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X was the first mobile phone to receive FCC acceptance in 1983. DynaTAC was actually an abbreviation of Dynamic Adaptive Total Area Coverage. The DynaTAC weighed 28 ounces and was 10 inches high, not including its flexible rubber whip antenna. In addition to the typical 12-key telephone keypad, it had nine additional special keys. The DynaTAC’s display utilized red LEDs, and which was limited in what information could be shown. The battery allowed for a call up to 60 minutes, after which it was necessary to charge the phone up to 10 hours in a trickle charger or 1 hour in a fast charger which was a separate accessory.

I’m sure mainy of you know at least one person that had “the brick”. It would be great to see a comeback of this phone. Imagine people walking around talking on the brick. The only problem is where to put the phone when you’re not using it. I seriously doubt we’ll ever see a return, but you never know!

Posted in Old School Fridays | March 20, 2009 | 1 Comment » |

One Response to “Old School Fridays – Motorola DynaTAC “The Brick””

Old School Fridays - First Cell Phone Commercial (Centel) | TrendyCellular Blog April 24, 2009

[...] The commercial was for the Centel. I love this commercial because not only does it highlight “the brick“, but it shows the original car phone. You know, the cell phone that was installed directly [...]

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