• Robert Hooke created this phone

    Robert Hooke created this phone
    Before the invention of the electromagnetic telephone, there were mechanical acoustic devices for transmitting spoken words and music over a distance greater than that of normal speech. The very earliest mechanical telephones were based on sound transmission through pipes or other physical media, and among the very earliest experiments were those conducted by the British physicist and polymath Robert Hooke from 1664 to 1685.[1][2] From 1664 to 1665 Hooke experimented with sound transmitter.
  • Antonia Meucci invented this phone

    Antonia Meucci invented this phone
    Of course, Alexander Graham Bell is the father of the telephone. After all it was his design that was first patented, however, he was not the first inventor to come up with the idea of a telephone. Antonio Meucci, an Italian immigrant, began developing the design of a talking telegraph or telephone in 1849.
  • Innocenz Vincenzo was the one who thought of the idea of the phone

    Innocenz Vincenzo was the one who thought of the idea of the phone
    Innocenzo Vincenzo Bartolomeo Luigi Carlo Manzetti[1] (Italian pronunciation: [innoˈtʃɛntso manˈdzetti]; 17 March 1826 – 15 March 1877) was an Italian inventor born in Aosta. Following his primary school studies he went to the Jesuit-run Saint Bénin Boarding School and then on to Turin where he was awarded a diploma in land surveying before returning to Aosta.
  • He invented the liquid transmitter

    He invented the liquid transmitter
    Elisha Gray (August 2, 1835 – January 21, 1901) was an American electrical engineer who co-founded the Western Electric Manufacturing Company. Gray is best known for his development of a telephone prototype in 1876 in Highland Park, Illinois. Some recent authors have argued that Gray should be considered the true inventor of the telephone because Alexander Graham Bell allegedly stole the idea of the liquid transmitter from him,[1] although Bell had been using liquid transmitter.
  • Phone

    Phone
    Alexander Graham Bell's patent for the telephone, #174,465, issued by the patent office on March 7th, 1876, has been called the most valuable patent ever issued. There is no denying its importance today, but the story of the Telephone includes a little known, but historic competitive chapter that began a short time after the first patent was issued and didn't end until Bell's monopoly was firmly entrenched.
  • Martin Cooper was the first to invent the first cell phone

    Martin Cooper was the first to invent the first cell phone
    A mobile phone is a wireless handheld device that allows users to make calls and send text messages, among other features. The earliest generation of mobile phones could only make and receive calls. Today’s mobile phones, however, are packed with many additional features, such as Web browsers, games, cameras, video players and even navigational systems.
  • The first iPhone ever made

    The first iPhone ever made
    On June 29, 2007, Apple Computers released its new touch screen smart phone called the iPhone. Who invented the iPhone? Well, over two hundred different patents were part of the design of the new iPhone, so pinpointing one inventor would be unfair. However, we can discuss the key personal who brought the iPhone into existence.Steve Jobs co-invented the Apple I and Apple II computers together with Steve Wozniak (main designer) and others.