
Episode 2 | Network Evolution 2G
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The second generation (2G) of mobile networks marked a fundamental shift from analog to digital technology, revolutionizing mobile communication beyond the voice-only capabilities of 1G. This digital leap, driven by the limitations of 1G like poor security and inefficient spectrum use, brought significant improvements such as enhanced security through encryption, vastly improved call quality by filtering out static, and greater network capacity due to digital compression. 2G also opened the door to new data-centric services by treating voice as a form of data. The 2G era was largely defined by two competing digital standards: GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) and CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access). GSM utilized Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) and famously introduced the Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) card, which decoupled user identity from the handset, allowing for easy phone swapping and contributing to GSM's global dominance. CDMA, on the other hand, used a unique coding system to separate calls sharing the same frequency, and initially, user identity was tied directly to the phone.
2G's most culturally significant contribution was the introduction of SMS (Short Message Service), or text messaging, which created a new paradigm for brief, asynchronous communication. As networks evolved, MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service) emerged, allowing for the transmission of low-resolution photos, audio, and short videos, marking the first step towards rich mobile media. Furthermore, 2G provided the first taste of mobile data with GPRS ("2.5G"), which introduced always-on, packet-switched data connections (though slow at 30-40 kbps) for basic mobile web Browse and email. This was further improved by EDGE ("2.75G"), offering faster speeds up to 236 kbps and serving as a crucial bridge to 3G's mobile broadband. The legacy of 2G is immense: it democratized mobile phones, transforming them into mass-market products, laid the foundation for the mobile data ecosystem, fostered a new communication culture through texting, and established the SIM card as a global standard. Even as 2G networks are being decommissioned in Canada and globally as of June 10, 2025, its impact on shaping our modern connected world is indelible.