Pagers - How do they Work?
by Trevor Dumbleton

Published on this site: May 19th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

How do those beeping things work that people carry around on their
belts? There are several types of pagers but, basically, it's all
done by good, old- fashioned radio waves. Someone sends you a text
message with a touch-tone phone - or it can also be sent by email
- and the message is forwarded to the thing on your belt, which
then emits a beep or vibration to tell you you've got a message.
This is achieved through a cooperation of communication technologies
- basically, messages are broadcast on a certain radio frequency
through a group of radio base stations, and the pager receives that
message.
The pager has a LCD screen which displays the phone number or text
message you are receiving. The simplicity or complexity of the kind
of message the pager can receive depends, in part, on whether it
is a numeric pager or an alphanumeric pager. If it is numeric, the
caller's numeric message is what you receive (usually their phone
number for you to call them back). If you have an alphanumeric pager,
a text message is transmitted to you by a carrier operator's transcription
of a telephonic message. Or text can be sent to you through an alpha
entry terminal or a modem. Other options are two-way pagers which
function through a PCS band, and interactive pagers which are like
tiny computers, allowing telephone-free communications.
You can store a number of messages in your pager - which include
the time and date the message was sent - and some have expanded
memory to allow you to store even more. This way you can keep phone
numbers and information you will need again.
Pagers run a long time on a small battery. One reason is that pagers
function through the use of data blocks called codewords. There
is a decoder that can determine whether the incoming codewords are
for your pager or not and shut off if they are not. Thus, the battery's
life is extended.
How far can you travel with your pager? The distance between your
pager and the transmitter for which it has been programmed can vary.
When you purchase your pager package, you can ask for local, regional
or national coverage - at, of course, increasing costs for your
paging service and pager. It all depends on what you need - the
beauty of it is you can purchase a pager that will exactly fit your
personal, professional and geographic requirements.

Trevor Dumbleton - http://pagershq.com
Pagers, how they work and where to buy them from!


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