Cellphone inventor Martin Cooper: Smartphones aren't optimal

Image | Cellphone Inventor Martin Cooper

Caption: The father of the cellphone, Martin Cooper says cellphones are still very primitive because we are slaves to them, rather than them being slaves to us. (Yorick Jansens/AFP/Getty Images)

Audio | The Current : Cellphone inventor Martin Cooper: Smartphones aren't optimal

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Walking down the street, sixth avenue in New York... I said, 'This is Marty Cooper. I'm calling you on a cellphone.' - Martin Cooper making the first ever call on a cellphone
The race to space may have captured headlines in the 50's and 60's, but by the 70's a new contest had begun -- the one to dominate the world of personal communications. And by the 80's, commercials for "cellular radio telephones" hit the airwaves.

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Ads for cellular phones successfully predicting a communication revolution. But even tech pioneers couldn't have predicted the cellphone's far-reaching effects on our lives.
Today, as part of our project Ripple Effect(external link), we explore the unintended consequences of the cellphone and ask where it's successor the smartphone is headed next.
Martin Cooper is a man known as the "father of the cellphone(external link)," He and his team at Motorola are credited with making the first portable cellphone. Martin Cooper was in Del Mar, California.
The Cellphone: 40 years of personal wireless communication

Photogallery | The history of the cellphone

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Did the cellphone create a ripple effect in your life? How would you like smartphones to evolve?
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This segment was produced by The Current's Sarah Grant.