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k0k0 | 2 years ago

> Each base station can only handle 8 simultaneous phone calls

Perhaps you are confusing that each GSM transceiver (TRX) provides 8 time-division channels with call capacity, but most cells and specifically the BTS in GSM parlance, especially any in a well populated area have/had way more than one transceiver. 30-40 was not unheard of in later equipment, though 10 or so was more typical. Late in GSM's life there was another technique to squeeze more channels, OSC.

Furthermore those 8 TDMA slots could be split in 1/2 or 1/4 with lower rate codecs, so it was more than 8 per TRX as well.

anything bigger than a picocell would carry way more than 8 simultaneous calls.

> Some large conferences have had base stations with their range measured in single digit meters (<30 ft)

Femtocells are still a thing today. Not so much to do with frequency capacity.

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8fingerlouie|2 years ago

> Perhaps you are confusing that each GSM transceiver (TRX) provides 8 time-division channels with call capacity

I was talking 2G/3G. It has been 20 years since i wrote software for mobile phones :) But i should probably have been more specific and said you can have 8 active calls per channel. And i have no doubt today with 4G/5G and a shift to VoIP that you can have way more than that.

> Femtocells are still a thing today. Not so much to do with frequency capacity.

I was attempting to refer to the scalability/complexity of the network, which scales from 10s of kilometers to 10s of meters, or even more/less.

But as i said, i wrote software for the phones. My understanding of the network side of things was/is limited to the rudimentary knowledge needed to write that, and i'm happy to be corrected.