WO1992004797A1 - Pager and radiotelephone apparatus - Google Patents

Pager and radiotelephone apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1992004797A1
WO1992004797A1 PCT/US1991/005068 US9105068W WO9204797A1 WO 1992004797 A1 WO1992004797 A1 WO 1992004797A1 US 9105068 W US9105068 W US 9105068W WO 9204797 A1 WO9204797 A1 WO 9204797A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
pager
radiotelephone
paging
signal
section
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1991/005068
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Joseph C. Freeland
David M. Hess
Original Assignee
Motorola, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Motorola, Inc. filed Critical Motorola, Inc.
Priority to BR919105882A priority Critical patent/BR9105882A/en
Priority to GB9209283A priority patent/GB2254526B/en
Priority to KR1019920700994A priority patent/KR960001582B1/en
Publication of WO1992004797A1 publication Critical patent/WO1992004797A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/02Terminal devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/24Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts
    • H04B7/26Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile
    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08BSIGNALLING OR CALLING SYSTEMS; ORDER TELEGRAPHS; ALARM SYSTEMS
    • G08B5/00Visible signalling systems, e.g. personal calling systems, remote indication of seats occupied
    • G08B5/22Visible signalling systems, e.g. personal calling systems, remote indication of seats occupied using electric transmission; using electromagnetic transmission
    • G08B5/222Personal calling arrangements or devices, i.e. paging systems
    • G08B5/223Personal calling arrangements or devices, i.e. paging systems using wireless transmission
    • G08B5/224Paging receivers with visible signalling details
    • G08B5/228Paging receivers with visible signalling details combined with other devices having a different main function, e.g. watches

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to both the paging industry and the cellular radiotelephone industry.
  • Paging systems are typically one way radio communication systems.
  • An individual wishing to communicate with a pager user usually calls a central telephone number to access the central paging control.
  • the central paging control can be either automatic or operated by a human operator. If automatic, the caller keys in the number assigned to the individual pager they wish to reach. Once that pager is accessed, the caller can either leave a voice message for the paged individual or key in the telephone number to be displayed on the pager's display.
  • Some systems may also allow both types of paging.
  • the caller typically tells the operator the number of the pager and the message. The operator then pages the individ ⁇ ual, and relays the message when the paged individual calls the operator.
  • the radiotelephone allows a mobile user to make or receive a call anywhere within an area covered by the cellular communications sys ⁇ tem antennas.
  • Radiotelephone communication One problem with radiotelephone communication is that the radiotelephone user typically pays for incoming as well as outgoing calls. If an unwanted call is made to the ra- diotelephone, therefore, the radiotelephone user must pay for it at much higher rates than receiving a page.
  • the pager therefore, allows the called party to screen incoming calls to determine which telephone number to call back, thereby eliminating the charges for unwanted calls. While the pager solves some of the limitations of the cel ⁇ lular radiotelephone and vice versa, this creates the problem of carrying two communication devices to remain in contact while moving about an area. There is a need therefore for a single device combining the advantages of both the cellular radiotelephone and the pager.
  • the present invention encompasses a pager and radiotelephone apparatus combining a radio pager and a cellular radiotelephone into one unit, which may automatically receive a plurality of pages while the cellular radiotelephone is on, communicating a cellular telephone call, or off and unattended.
  • Fig. 1 shows a block diagram of a pager and radiotelephone apparatus 100 embodying the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 shows a flow chart for the process executed by the microcomputer of the cellular transceiver 104 in Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 shows a schematic of the interface circuitry 108 of the pager and radiotelephone apparatus in Fig. 1.
  • An example of a radio pager (102) is the pager shown and described in Motorola instruction manual number 68P81006B85-O, entitled "BRAVO SERIES Numeric Display Pagers A05JHB C Models 929-932 MHz", and the pager shown and described in Motorola instruction manual number 68P81044C10-A, entitled "SENSAR SERIES GSC Display Radio Pagers A05JRB/C Models 450-470 MHz".
  • radiotelephone (104) is the portable radiotelephone shown and described in Motorola instruction manual number 68P81054E60-0, entitled "DYNATAC Cellular Portable Telephone". All of these instruction manuals are published by and available from Motorola C & E Parts, 1313 East Algonquin Road, Schaumburg, Illinois 60196.
  • a single antenna (106) is shared by both the pager section (102) and radiotelephone section (104).
  • the antenna (106) is coupled via microstrip transmission lines to receive (125) and transmit (126) filters in the radiotelephone section (104) and a front-end receive filter (111) in the radio pager section (102),
  • a received signal, with a 930 MHz frequency in the preferred embodiment, from the front-end filter ( 11) is amplified by the preamplifier (112) and filtered by the filter (113) in the pager section (102).
  • a 73.75 MHZ crystal oscillator (115) signal is multiplied by twelve in multiplier (116) resulting in an 885 MHz injection signal that is mixed in mixer (114) with the 930 MHZ signal from the front-end filter (111), resulting in a 45 MHz signal.
  • a 45 MHz crystal filter (117) attenuates the signal above and below the 45 MHz RF carrier and the resulting signal is demodulated into a 455 kHz signal by the intermediate frequency circuit (118). This signal is then input to an interface circuit (119) in the pager section (102).
  • the interface circuit (119) of the pager section (102) interfaces the input signal to the microcomputer (121) in addition to squaring up the signal and providing power regulation for the rest of the pager section(102).
  • the microcomputer (121) contains a stack for storage of the incoming pages. In the preferred embodiment, the microcomputer (121) is capable of storing ten telephone numbers, although any number of telephone numbers maybe stored by changing the size of the stack.
  • the microcomputer (121) also controls the pager section (102).
  • Non-volatile memory also known in the art as a code plug (120), has the identification number assigned to that particular pager section (102) in addition to the options available for the pager.
  • Paging signals or pages transmitted to the pager section (102) include the identification number and a telephone number.
  • the microcomputer (121) reads the data stored in the code plug (120) and uses the read-out identification number to select its pages received on the 930 MHz paging channel.
  • the pager/telephone interface circuitry (108), illustrated in Fig. 3, interfaces the pager section (102) to the radiotelephone section (104).
  • This circuity contains a 128-bit shift register (302), a Motorola-type MC14517B integrated circuit, to store pages from the pager, and a dual D-type flip flop, a Motorola-type MC14013BD integrated circuit, to control the power state of the pager section (102).
  • This flip flop is also used by the pager section (102) to give a page received indication to the radiotelephone section (104).
  • the power-on LED (303) for the pager section (102) is also contained in this interface (108).
  • the radiotelephone section (104) is comprised of a receiver (122) and transmitter (123) controlled by a microcomputer (124), a Motorola-type 68HC11 microcomputer in the preferred embodiment.
  • the microcomputer (124) is also coupled to the display (128) for displaying telephone numbers and status messages, and to the keypad (127) having numeric pushbuttons for dialing phone numbers and function pushbuttons, such recall, clear and send pushbuttons, for controlling operation of radiotelephone section (104).
  • An I O bus (110) couples the radiotelephone's microcomputer (124) to the pager/telephone interface circuitry (108).
  • the receive filter of the radiotelephone section (104) is coupled to the radiotelephone receiver (122).
  • a radiotelephone call signal that is received by the receiver (122) is routed to the microcomputer (124) for processing.
  • a radiotelephone call to be made by the radiotelephone section (104) is routed by the microcomputer (124) to the transmitter (123) that is coupled to the transmit filter.
  • the process performed by the microcomputer (124) in the radiotelephone section (104) of the pager and radiotelephone apparatus (100) is illustrated in Fig. 2.
  • the apparatus (100) receives a page (201), it is stored in the stack of the pager section's microcomputer (121).
  • This page data is in a format that includes characters, such as hyphens, besides the telephone number to be called.
  • the PAGE RCVD INDICATION line toggles rapidly which causes the output of the comparator to go low, thereby clocking in a high into the D flip flop (301).
  • the output of the D flip flop (301) sets the page received line (PG RCVD) high and the ON/OFF line low. If the radiotelephone section (104) is off (202) when the page is received, the ON/OFF line going low powers it up (203) in order to inform the user that a page has been received and to give the user a chance to respond to the page. Additionally, a power-on flag is set so that later the radiotelephone section knows that it was powered up by the pager. If the radiotelephone section (104) is already on when the ON/OFF line goes low, this signal is ignored (204) by the 68HC11 microcomputer (124). A page counter in the 68HC11 microcomputer (124) is also incremented (205) enabling the apparatus to keep track of when the stack in the pager section's microcomputer is full.
  • the radiotelephone section (104) After the radiotelephone section (104) is on, the appropriate message is displayed in the apparatus' display (128) announcing the page receipt. In addition, an annunciation tone is turned on to aurally inform the user of the page. This tone, in the preferred embodiment, is turned on for ten short bursts. If a page is received and the pager section's microcomputer stack is not full, the message "PAGE" is displayed. If the last page received filled up the stack, the message "PAGFULL" is displayed. Other messages may also be used. For example, if two pages have been received and the pager section's microcomputer stack is not full, the message " 2 PAGES" may be displayed.
  • An annunciation tone different from the normal page received tone, is used to aurally inform the user that the memory is full. If the last page received overflows the stack, making the number of pages received greater than five, the message "OVERFLO" is displayed. This last message will be displayed for each successive page received that overflows the stack.
  • the power-on flag is checked (212) to determine if the pager turned on the radiotelephone section (104). If the flag is set, the radiotelephone section (104) is powered down (211) to conserve battery power, while the pager section remains on. The flag not set indicates that the user turned on the radiotelephone section (104) and wishes it to remain on.
  • the user has three options to respond to a page using the keypad (127): a recall pushbutton (RCL) recalls the page into the display of the apparatus, a clear (CLR) pushbutton clears the page from the apparatus display and the radiotelephone section's scratchpad memory, and a send (SND) pushbutton calls the page telephone number stored in scratchpad memory.
  • RCL recall pushbutton
  • CLR clear
  • SND send pushbutton
  • all the pages (ie. telephone numbers) in the pager section's microcomputer stack (121) is moved, one page at a time, from the stack to the shift register (302) in the pager/telephone interface circuitry (108).
  • a memory pointer in the microcomputer (121) is set to point to the first page in the stack.
  • This page data is moved to the shift register(302) by clocking the page data, on the PGR DATA line, with the bidirectional PGR CLK line.
  • the radiotelephone section (104) can use the same clock line (PHN CLK) to clock the page data from the shift register (302) on the data line (PHN DATA) to the non-volatile memory of the microcomputer (124).
  • the PGR RESET line is then pulsed to move the memory pointer to the next page or the next part of the first page and the memory transfer operation is repeated (each page may have two parts).
  • the page data is clocked into the non-volatile memory of the radiotelephone section (104), it is decoded to get rid of all non- numeric characters.
  • the page counter is decremented after each page is clocked into the radiotelephone section's memory. This continues until the page counter is zero.
  • the pushbutton that was activated is processed (210) to determine what to do with the telephone numbers. No matter which pushbutton was entered, the most recent telephone number will be moved into the radiotelephone section's scratchpad memory while the remaining telephone numbers will remain in the non-volatile memory. If the SND pushbutton was activated, the telephone number in scratchpad memory is called. If the CLR pushbutton was activated, the scratchpad memory will be cleared but the telephone numbers stored in the non-volatile memory will remain for later recall. If the RCL pushbutton was activated, the scratchpad memory will be displayed but not called. Different location in the scratchpad memory can be recalled by actgivating the RCL pushbutton followed by a numeric pushbutton.
  • the PAGER ON/OFF line is pulsed high momentarily by the 68HC11 microcomputer (124) to toggle the D flip flop (301), thereby turning the pager section (102) off " . This clears the pages stored in the pager section's microcomputer (121).
  • the PAGER ON/OFF line is pulsed again to turn the pager section (102) back on.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
  • Transceivers (AREA)

Abstract

The present invention encompasses a pager and radiotelephone apparatus (100) having a radio pager section (102) and a cellular radiotelephone section (104) into one unit. The apparatus (100) may automatically receive a plurality of pages while the cellular radiotelephone section (104) is on, communicating a cellular telephone call, or off and unattended. The received pages are stored in the pager section (102) until the apparatus user acknowledges their receipt by a keystroke. The pages are then transferred to the radiotelephone section (104) and stored in non-volatile memory for later use.

Description

PAGERAND RADIOTELEPHONEAPPARATUS
Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to both the paging industry and the cellular radiotelephone industry.
Background of the Invention
Paging systems are typically one way radio communication systems. An individual wishing to communicate with a pager user usually calls a central telephone number to access the central paging control. The central paging control can be either automatic or operated by a human operator. If automatic, the caller keys in the number assigned to the individual pager they wish to reach. Once that pager is accessed, the caller can either leave a voice message for the paged individual or key in the telephone number to be displayed on the pager's display. Some systems may also allow both types of paging.
If the central paging control is operated by a human op¬ erator, the caller typically tells the operator the number of the pager and the message. The operator then pages the individ¬ ual, and relays the message when the paged individual calls the operator.
Once paged, the individual must find a telephone to an¬ swer the page. This problem can be solved by the paged indi¬ vidual carrying a cellular radiotelephone. The radiotelephone allows a mobile user to make or receive a call anywhere within an area covered by the cellular communications sys¬ tem antennas.
One problem with radiotelephone communication is that the radiotelephone user typically pays for incoming as well as outgoing calls. If an unwanted call is made to the ra- diotelephone, therefore, the radiotelephone user must pay for it at much higher rates than receiving a page. The pager, therefore, allows the called party to screen incoming calls to determine which telephone number to call back, thereby eliminating the charges for unwanted calls. While the pager solves some of the limitations of the cel¬ lular radiotelephone and vice versa, this creates the problem of carrying two communication devices to remain in contact while moving about an area. There is a need therefore for a single device combining the advantages of both the cellular radiotelephone and the pager.
Summary of the Invention
The present invention encompasses a pager and radiotelephone apparatus combining a radio pager and a cellular radiotelephone into one unit, which may automatically receive a plurality of pages while the cellular radiotelephone is on, communicating a cellular telephone call, or off and unattended.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Fig. 1 shows a block diagram of a pager and radiotelephone apparatus 100 embodying the present invention.
Fig. 2 shows a flow chart for the process executed by the microcomputer of the cellular transceiver 104 in Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 shows a schematic of the interface circuitry 108 of the pager and radiotelephone apparatus in Fig. 1.
Description of a Preferred Embodiment
The radiotelephone and pager apparatus (100), illustrated in Fig. 1 and embodying the present invention, combines a radio pager section (102) and a cellular radiotelephone section (104) into one small, lightweight unit. An example of a radio pager (102) is the pager shown and described in Motorola instruction manual number 68P81006B85-O, entitled "BRAVO SERIES Numeric Display Pagers A05JHB C Models 929-932 MHz", and the pager shown and described in Motorola instruction manual number 68P81044C10-A, entitled "SENSAR SERIES GSC Display Radio Pagers A05JRB/C Models 450-470 MHz". An example of a radiotelephone (104) is the portable radiotelephone shown and described in Motorola instruction manual number 68P81054E60-0, entitled "DYNATAC Cellular Portable Telephone". All of these instruction manuals are published by and available from Motorola C & E Parts, 1313 East Algonquin Road, Schaumburg, Illinois 60196.
A single antenna (106) is shared by both the pager section (102) and radiotelephone section (104). The antenna (106) is coupled via microstrip transmission lines to receive (125) and transmit (126) filters in the radiotelephone section (104) and a front-end receive filter (111) in the radio pager section (102),
A received signal, with a 930 MHz frequency in the preferred embodiment, from the front-end filter ( 11) is amplified by the preamplifier (112) and filtered by the filter (113) in the pager section (102). A 73.75 MHZ crystal oscillator (115) signal is multiplied by twelve in multiplier (116) resulting in an 885 MHz injection signal that is mixed in mixer (114) with the 930 MHZ signal from the front-end filter (111), resulting in a 45 MHz signal. A 45 MHz crystal filter (117) attenuates the signal above and below the 45 MHz RF carrier and the resulting signal is demodulated into a 455 kHz signal by the intermediate frequency circuit (118). This signal is then input to an interface circuit (119) in the pager section (102).
C.I U lϊBzzSTITUTΞ SHEET The interface circuit (119) of the pager section (102) interfaces the input signal to the microcomputer (121) in addition to squaring up the signal and providing power regulation for the rest of the pager section(102). The microcomputer (121) contains a stack for storage of the incoming pages. In the preferred embodiment, the microcomputer (121) is capable of storing ten telephone numbers, although any number of telephone numbers maybe stored by changing the size of the stack. The microcomputer (121) also controls the pager section (102). Non-volatile memory, also known in the art as a code plug (120), has the identification number assigned to that particular pager section (102) in addition to the options available for the pager. Paging signals or pages transmitted to the pager section (102) include the identification number and a telephone number. Each time the pager section (102) is turned on, the microcomputer (121) reads the data stored in the code plug (120) and uses the read-out identification number to select its pages received on the 930 MHz paging channel. The pager/telephone interface circuitry (108), illustrated in Fig. 3, interfaces the pager section (102) to the radiotelephone section (104). This circuity contains a 128-bit shift register (302), a Motorola-type MC14517B integrated circuit, to store pages from the pager, and a dual D-type flip flop, a Motorola-type MC14013BD integrated circuit, to control the power state of the pager section (102). This flip flop is also used by the pager section (102) to give a page received indication to the radiotelephone section (104). In addition, the power-on LED (303) for the pager section (102) is also contained in this interface (108).
The radiotelephone section (104) is comprised of a receiver (122) and transmitter (123) controlled by a microcomputer (124), a Motorola-type 68HC11 microcomputer in the preferred embodiment. The microcomputer (124) is also coupled to the display (128) for displaying telephone numbers and status messages, and to the keypad (127) having numeric pushbuttons for dialing phone numbers and function pushbuttons, such recall, clear and send pushbuttons, for controlling operation of radiotelephone section (104). An I O bus (110) couples the radiotelephone's microcomputer (124) to the pager/telephone interface circuitry (108). The receive filter of the radiotelephone section (104) is coupled to the radiotelephone receiver (122). A radiotelephone call signal that is received by the receiver (122) is routed to the microcomputer (124) for processing. A radiotelephone call to be made by the radiotelephone section (104) is routed by the microcomputer (124) to the transmitter (123) that is coupled to the transmit filter. The process performed by the microcomputer (124) in the radiotelephone section (104) of the pager and radiotelephone apparatus (100) is illustrated in Fig. 2. When the apparatus (100) receives a page (201), it is stored in the stack of the pager section's microcomputer (121). This page data is in a format that includes characters, such as hyphens, besides the telephone number to be called. After the page data is stored, the PAGE RCVD INDICATION line toggles rapidly which causes the output of the comparator to go low, thereby clocking in a high into the D flip flop (301). The output of the D flip flop (301) sets the page received line (PG RCVD) high and the ON/OFF line low. If the radiotelephone section (104) is off (202) when the page is received, the ON/OFF line going low powers it up (203) in order to inform the user that a page has been received and to give the user a chance to respond to the page. Additionally, a power-on flag is set so that later the radiotelephone section knows that it was powered up by the pager. If the radiotelephone section (104) is already on when the ON/OFF line goes low, this signal is ignored (204) by the 68HC11 microcomputer (124). A page counter in the 68HC11 microcomputer (124) is also incremented (205) enabling the apparatus to keep track of when the stack in the pager section's microcomputer is full.
After the radiotelephone section (104) is on, the appropriate message is displayed in the apparatus' display (128) announcing the page receipt. In addition, an annunciation tone is turned on to aurally inform the user of the page. This tone, in the preferred embodiment, is turned on for ten short bursts. If a page is received and the pager section's microcomputer stack is not full, the message "PAGE" is displayed. If the last page received filled up the stack, the message "PAGFULL" is displayed. Other messages may also be used. For example, if two pages have been received and the pager section's microcomputer stack is not full, the message " 2 PAGES" may be displayed. An annunciation tone, different from the normal page received tone, is used to aurally inform the user that the memory is full. If the last page received overflows the stack, making the number of pages received greater than five, the message "OVERFLO" is displayed. This last message will be displayed for each successive page received that overflows the stack.
Once the user knows a page is present, some action by the user (206) is necessary to move the page from the pager section (102) to the radiotelephone memory for display or dialing. If no action is taken by the user within a certain time period (208), six seconds in the preferred embodiment, the power-on flag is checked (212) to determine if the pager turned on the radiotelephone section (104). If the flag is set, the radiotelephone section (104) is powered down (211) to conserve battery power, while the pager section remains on. The flag not set indicates that the user turned on the radiotelephone section (104) and wishes it to remain on.
The user has three options to respond to a page using the keypad (127): a recall pushbutton (RCL) recalls the page into the display of the apparatus, a clear (CLR) pushbutton clears the page from the apparatus display and the radiotelephone section's scratchpad memory, and a send (SND) pushbutton calls the page telephone number stored in scratchpad memory. If the radiotelephone section (104) is powered down without response by the user, as long as the pager section (102) remains powered up, the page data will be stored in the microcomputer (121) stack for later use. When the radiotelephone section (104) is powered up again, "PAGE" will be displayed to inform the user that a page is waiting.
Powering down the radiotelephone section (104) with the pager section (102) still powered up will cause a unique tone to be emitted to indicate that the pager section (102) is still on and, therefore, using power. When the SND, CLR, or RCL pushbuttons are activated
(209), all the pages (ie. telephone numbers) in the pager section's microcomputer stack (121) is moved, one page at a time, from the stack to the shift register (302) in the pager/telephone interface circuitry (108). Initially, a memory pointer in the microcomputer (121) is set to point to the first page in the stack. This page data is moved to the shift register(302) by clocking the page data, on the PGR DATA line, with the bidirectional PGR CLK line. Once the page data is in the shift register (302), the radiotelephone section (104) can use the same clock line (PHN CLK) to clock the page data from the shift register (302) on the data line (PHN DATA) to the non-volatile memory of the microcomputer (124). The PGR RESET line is then pulsed to move the memory pointer to the next page or the next part of the first page and the memory transfer operation is repeated (each page may have two parts). As the page data is clocked into the non-volatile memory of the radiotelephone section (104), it is decoded to get rid of all non- numeric characters. The page counter is decremented after each page is clocked into the radiotelephone section's memory. This continues until the page counter is zero.
Once the telephone numbers of each page are stored in non-volatile memory of the radiotelephone section (104), the pushbutton that was activated is processed (210) to determine what to do with the telephone numbers. No matter which pushbutton was entered, the most recent telephone number will be moved into the radiotelephone section's scratchpad memory while the remaining telephone numbers will remain in the non-volatile memory. If the SND pushbutton was activated, the telephone number in scratchpad memory is called. If the CLR pushbutton was activated, the scratchpad memory will be cleared but the telephone numbers stored in the non-volatile memory will remain for later recall. If the RCL pushbutton was activated, the scratchpad memory will be displayed but not called. Different location in the scratchpad memory can be recalled by actgivating the RCL pushbutton followed by a numeric pushbutton.
Once all the page data is moved out of the pager section (102), the PAGER ON/OFF line is pulsed high momentarily by the 68HC11 microcomputer (124) to toggle the D flip flop (301), thereby turning the pager section (102) off". This clears the pages stored in the pager section's microcomputer (121). The PAGER ON/OFF line is pulsed again to turn the pager section (102) back on.
One skilled in the art will know that various aspects of the present invention can be changed while still remaining within the scope of the invention. These changes may include the number of pages stored in the microcomputer stack, the number of telephone numbers stored in the radiotelephone section, and the time the radiotelephone section remains on. In summary, a combination radiotelephone/pager apparatus has been shown that permits operation in both radiotelephone and paging systems.

Claims

Cteipis
1. A pager and radiotelephone apparatus for communicating radiotelephone call signals on radiotelephone channels and receiving paging signals on a paging radio channel, the radiotelephone/pager apparatus comprising: pager means for receiving and storing a plurality of radio paging signals each having a telephone number with at least one digit, said pager means further providing an indication signal when each paging signal has been received, and said pager means responsive to a control signal for reading out said stored telephone numbers; and cellular transceiver means being coupled to the pager means and having at least a recall pushbutton and a send pushbutton, said cellular transceiver means responsive to the indication signal for counting the number of paging signals received, responsive to activation of the recall or send pushbutton for generating the control signal and receiving and storing each read-out telephone number, and responsive to activation of the send pushbutton for transmitting radiotelephone call signals using the last received read-out telephone number.
2. A pager and radiotelephone apparatus for communicating radiotelephone call signals on radiotelephone channels and receiving paging signals on a paging radio channel, the radiotelephone/pager apparatus comprising: pager means for receiving and storing a plurality of radio paging signals each having a telephone number with at least one digit, said pager means further providing an indication signal when each paging signal has been received, and said pager means responsive to a control signal for reading out said stored telephone numbers, said pager means further responsive to an on/off signal, and said pager means further responsive to a reset signal; register means coupled to the pager means for receiving each read out telephone number; and cellular transceiver means having at least one control pushbutton and being coupled to the pager means and the register means, said cellular transceiver means responsive to the indication signal for counting the number of paging signals received, said cellular transceiver means coupled to title register means for generating the control signal enabling said pager means to read out the stored telephone numbers, for generating the on/off signal for controlling power to the pager means, for generating the reset signal for scrolling through the stored telephone numbers, and transmitting radiotelephone call signals using the telephone number received in corresponding paging signal.
3. A method for controlling a combination pager and radiotelephone apparatus, said combination pager and radiotelephone apparatus including pager means for receiving on a paging radio channel a plurality of radio paging signals each having a telephone number with at least one digit, and said combination pager and radiotelephone apparatus including cellular transceiver means being coupled to the pager means and having at least a recall and send pushbutton for transmitting on radiotelephone channels radiotelephone call signals, the method comprising the steps of: receiving and storing in said paging means a plurality of radio paging signals each having a telephone number with at least one digit; producing an indication signal when each paging signal has been received in said paging means; reading out in response to a control signal said stored telephone numbers in said paging means; counting in response to said indication signal the number of paging signals received in said cellular transceiver means; generating in response to activation of the recall or send pushbutton the control signal and receiving and storing each read-out telephone number in said cellular transceiver means; and transmitting in response to activation of the send pushbutton radiotelephone call signals using the last received read-out telephone number in said cellular transceiver means.
PCT/US1991/005068 1990-08-30 1991-07-18 Pager and radiotelephone apparatus WO1992004797A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
BR919105882A BR9105882A (en) 1990-08-30 1991-07-18 RADIO-TELEPHONE AND BEEP DEVICE, AND PROCESS TO CONTROL COMBINED BEEP AND RADIO-PHONE DEVICE
GB9209283A GB2254526B (en) 1990-08-30 1991-07-18 Pager and radiotelephone apparatus
KR1019920700994A KR960001582B1 (en) 1990-08-30 1991-07-18 Pager and radio telephone apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US57547390A 1990-08-30 1990-08-30
US575,473 1990-08-30

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1992004797A1 true WO1992004797A1 (en) 1992-03-19

Family

ID=24300470

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1991/005068 WO1992004797A1 (en) 1990-08-30 1991-07-18 Pager and radiotelephone apparatus

Country Status (11)

Country Link
JP (1) JP2838157B2 (en)
KR (1) KR960001582B1 (en)
AR (1) AR246666A1 (en)
AU (1) AU8420591A (en)
BR (1) BR9105882A (en)
CA (1) CA2066574C (en)
ES (1) ES2091148B1 (en)
FR (1) FR2668279A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2254526B (en)
IT (1) IT1250767B (en)
WO (1) WO1992004797A1 (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2269072A (en) * 1992-07-23 1994-01-26 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable telephone incorporating a detachable pager
EP0782359A2 (en) 1996-01-01 1997-07-02 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. Mobile terminal having user-actuated pager mode
GB2309862A (en) * 1996-02-03 1997-08-06 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable Telephone Apparatus with Paging and Automatic Dialling
US5878351A (en) * 1996-11-07 1999-03-02 Nokia Mobile Phones Limited Methods and apparatus for providing delayed transmission of SMS delivery acknowledgement, manual acknowledgement and SMS messages
KR100391183B1 (en) * 1994-09-27 2003-10-17 소니 일렉트로닉스 인코포레이티드 How to install the user interface on computing devices, computing devices, how to read emails, and computer systems
US7310512B2 (en) 2001-12-28 2007-12-18 National Institute Of Information And Communications Technology Radio communication method, radio communication system, wide area radio communication base station, and radio communication terminal
US8222995B1 (en) 2011-01-04 2012-07-17 Critical Alert Systems, LLC System and method for transmitting messages received from a paging network on a paging device to electronic devices
US8254970B1 (en) 2011-06-08 2012-08-28 Critical Alert Systems, LLC Systems and methods for communicating with a paging network operations center through wireless cellular devices

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH04150444A (en) * 1990-10-11 1992-05-22 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Terminal equipment for radio telephone system
US5526398A (en) * 1993-05-04 1996-06-11 Motorola, Inc. Method of operating a combination radiotelephone and paging device
DE19527792B4 (en) * 1995-07-19 2006-05-04 Funkwerk Köpenick GmbH Call forwarding to secondary call receiver

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4412217A (en) * 1981-09-29 1983-10-25 Motorola, Inc. Pager with visible display indicating status of memory
DE3329267A1 (en) * 1983-08-12 1985-02-28 Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München Process in a telephone system for the connection of mobile subscriber terminals
US4713808A (en) * 1985-11-27 1987-12-15 A T & E Corporation Watch pager system and communication protocol
JPS63224422A (en) * 1987-03-13 1988-09-19 Hitachi Ltd Composite terminal for mobile communication

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2179823A (en) * 1985-08-28 1987-03-11 Philips Electronic Associated Communications system
US4747122A (en) * 1986-10-27 1988-05-24 Mobile Communications Corporation Of America Mobile paging call back system and related method
FI88843C (en) * 1990-05-21 1993-07-12 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd MULTIFUNKTIONSTELEFONANORDNING

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4412217A (en) * 1981-09-29 1983-10-25 Motorola, Inc. Pager with visible display indicating status of memory
DE3329267A1 (en) * 1983-08-12 1985-02-28 Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München Process in a telephone system for the connection of mobile subscriber terminals
US4713808A (en) * 1985-11-27 1987-12-15 A T & E Corporation Watch pager system and communication protocol
JPS63224422A (en) * 1987-03-13 1988-09-19 Hitachi Ltd Composite terminal for mobile communication

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2269072B (en) * 1992-07-23 1996-01-17 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable terminal unit containing radio paging receiver
GB2269072A (en) * 1992-07-23 1994-01-26 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable telephone incorporating a detachable pager
KR100391183B1 (en) * 1994-09-27 2003-10-17 소니 일렉트로닉스 인코포레이티드 How to install the user interface on computing devices, computing devices, how to read emails, and computer systems
EP0782359A2 (en) 1996-01-01 1997-07-02 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. Mobile terminal having user-actuated pager mode
US5842141A (en) * 1996-01-01 1998-11-24 Nokia Mobile Phones Limited Mobile terminal having user-actuated pager mode
CN1299524C (en) * 1996-02-03 2007-02-07 松下电器产业株式会社 Portable telephone apparatus with paging
GB2309862A (en) * 1996-02-03 1997-08-06 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable Telephone Apparatus with Paging and Automatic Dialling
GB2309862B (en) * 1996-02-03 1998-01-21 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable telephone apparatus with paging
US5878351A (en) * 1996-11-07 1999-03-02 Nokia Mobile Phones Limited Methods and apparatus for providing delayed transmission of SMS delivery acknowledgement, manual acknowledgement and SMS messages
US7310512B2 (en) 2001-12-28 2007-12-18 National Institute Of Information And Communications Technology Radio communication method, radio communication system, wide area radio communication base station, and radio communication terminal
US8222995B1 (en) 2011-01-04 2012-07-17 Critical Alert Systems, LLC System and method for transmitting messages received from a paging network on a paging device to electronic devices
US8629758B2 (en) 2011-01-04 2014-01-14 Critical Alert Systems, LLC System and method for transmitting messages received from a paging network on a paging device to electronic devices
US8254970B1 (en) 2011-06-08 2012-08-28 Critical Alert Systems, LLC Systems and methods for communicating with a paging network operations center through wireless cellular devices
US8331960B1 (en) 2011-06-08 2012-12-11 Critical Alert Systems Llc Systems and methods for communicating with a paging network operations center through wireless cellular devices

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB9209283D0 (en) 1992-07-08
GB2254526B (en) 1995-03-01
JP2838157B2 (en) 1998-12-16
ES2091148B1 (en) 1997-05-01
AR246666A1 (en) 1994-09-30
JPH05502150A (en) 1993-04-15
ES2091148A1 (en) 1996-10-16
FR2668279A1 (en) 1992-04-24
IT1250767B (en) 1995-04-21
KR920702583A (en) 1992-09-04
GB2254526A (en) 1992-10-07
BR9105882A (en) 1992-10-13
ITRM910640A0 (en) 1991-08-28
AU8420591A (en) 1992-03-30
ITRM910640A1 (en) 1992-02-29
CA2066574A1 (en) 1992-03-01
KR960001582B1 (en) 1996-02-02
CA2066574C (en) 1997-01-21
FR2668279B1 (en) 1995-05-05

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5148473A (en) Pager and radiotelephone apparatus
CA1292042C (en) Acknowledge back pager with adaptive variable transmitter output power
EP0398926B1 (en) Frequency division multiplexed acknowledge back paging system
US5142279A (en) Acknowledge back paging system having the capability of matching variable length data messages to pager addresses
US5117449A (en) Dual receiver apparatus for integrated paging and radiotelephone functions
EP0398934B1 (en) Acknowledge back pager with frequency control apparatus
US4882579A (en) Code division multiplexed acknowledge back paging system
KR0131596B1 (en) Acknowledge back pager with apparatus for controlling transmit frequency
US8483667B2 (en) Mobile telephone with receive only mode
JP2555054B2 (en) Compound terminal for mobile communication
WO1992009178A1 (en) Cellular telephone with pager
KR960001582B1 (en) Pager and radio telephone apparatus
JP2002314475A (en) Wireless communication unit, wireless communication system and communication unit
US6151515A (en) 7, 8 segment display for mobile radio telephone
JPH07131404A (en) Variable intermittent reception control system for mobile communication
US6049696A (en) Radio selective calling receiver having an auto-dialer function
JPH0364133A (en) Portable radio telephone terminal equipment
JPS625741A (en) Paging system with message possible for communication between paging slave sets
JP2700415B2 (en) Wireless telephone with individual calling device
JPS625742A (en) Paging transceiver with message display function
KR970008668B1 (en) Receiver
JPH0434598Y2 (en)
CA2025485C (en) Dual receiver apparatus for integrated paging and radiotelephone functions
WO1989008369A1 (en) Acknowledge back paging system having the capability of matching data messages to pager addresses
JPH04107016A (en) Mobile telephone system

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2066574

Country of ref document: CA

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AU BR CA DE DK ES GB JP KR SE

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 9250024

Country of ref document: ES

Kind code of ref document: A

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 009250024

Country of ref document: ES

Ref document number: P009250024

Country of ref document: ES

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 9250024

Country of ref document: ES

Kind code of ref document: A

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 9250024

Country of ref document: ES

Kind code of ref document: A

WWX Former pct application expired in national office

Ref document number: 9250024

Country of ref document: ES

Kind code of ref document: A