Cell phones allow people to make long distance phone calls and with digital those phone calls sound clear as if the person were standing next to them.
Have you ever thought about how a phone transfers voices from one place to another without all the noise of an analog phone? Well, in order to transfer our voice across the planet, phones must first convert the wavelengths of our voices into data points, and this is done with an analog-to-digital converter. This converter takes the wavelength produced by the sound of our voice and converts it into a set of data points. These data points are then interpreted as ones and zeros. Once the message reaches its designated destination, it goes through a digital-to-analog converter, which changes the data points from ones and zeros back into sound.
With this technique, the more data there is, the better the sound quality, and the closer it is to the original sounds as possible. However, our phones can only understand a limited amount of data.
This post was proofread by ChatGPT