Is this the British English word for two-way radio? If so, should this be merged with the other article?User:David Jordan 9/27/06
No, a radiophone is a (usually non-cellular) radio telephone system. The article is mostly concerned with two-way radio, which isn't anything to do with radiophones. Needs correcting.Rapido23:17, 9 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
- Um... Actually David Jordan is more correct. Radiotelephone is a not specifily British English term for the transmission of voice or other audio by radio in general.
- It is risky to say that the term "radiotelephone" was never used for pre-cellular mobile phones. However, those phones were most commonly known as "mobile phones" or sometimes "car phones". In how many old movies (I know, weak source) has the detective picked up the phone and asked for the mobile operator?
- Radio has many uses, and radiotelephone is one of them. You have Radio Navigation (finding location using beacons, etc), Radiotelegraphy (transmission of text using Morse or another code), Radio control (of models or useful equipment), RADAR (RAdio Direction and Range), Radiotelepony (the transmission of voice or other sounds by radio). Others will no doubt occur to me as soon as I post this.
- Until a few years ago in the United States you needed a Third, Second or First class Radiotelephone Operator's license to perform certain duties at a radio broadcast station. The FCC (the US regulator of all things radio) still issues a "General Radiotelephone Operator's License" (GROL) that covers mainly two-way radio.
- My point is that radiotelephone is more likly to mean "two-way radio" than "pre-cellular mobile phone". I think it is reasonable to merge any appropriate information from this article into the "two-way radio" and other articles. This page should then either redirect into "two-way radio" or have a short definition and links to specific articles about various uses of radio telephony, including two-way radio.Ferritecore01:15, 30 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
- I don't know about elsewhere, but as regards the UK, Rapido is right. Radiophone is what the pre-cellular system was called.91.84.126.68 (talk)18:50, 17 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I'm pulling the flag to merge the articles because a case can be made for either definition.User:David Jordan 11/19/2006.
- It's not clearly defined how a 'radiotelephone' is different from a mobile phone or two-way radio. Please could someone in the know clarify this? |Moemin05 (talk)17:49, 6 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
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Rethis edit, after some searching, I was surprised to learn that "tit" is old British military slang for a push-button:[1] "A push-button. E.g."Come on, hurry! Push the tit, we're running out of time - fire evrything we've got at them!" [Orig. Military use]",[2] "To squeeze the tit is to fire a machine gun or press any small button.",[3] "Military slang - A button that is pushed to fire a gun or release a bomb." -LuckyLouie (talk)02:09, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
- That's probably valuable if you are a WW I Brit geezer but in the context of today's equipment, it's less than useful :) Not worth fighting about, however, so grab them titties if you like :)116.231.75.71 (talk)13:49, 9 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Wiki Education assignment: Introduction to Media Culture
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This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between30 August 2022 and12 December 2022. Further details are availableon the course page. Student editor(s):Smiths23 (article contribs).
— Assignment last updated bySmiths23 (talk)15:18, 20 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]