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"I think we're still on that topic, still trying to figure out what computers are, how they change us, why we use them."
- Neal Stephenson

Suit-Phone  
  A means of wireless communication between individuals dressed in space suits.  

"Kent, look sharp when you get over on that ship," Crain told him. "I don't like the look of this Krell, and his story about all the officers being killed in the explosion sounds fishy to me."

"To me, too," Kent agreed. "But Liggett and I will have the suit-phones in our space-suits and can call you from there in case of need."

Technovelgy from The Sargasso of Space, by Edmond Hamilton.
Published by Astounding Stories in 1931
Additional resources -

Here's another description of the suit-phone:

As they returned up the dim corridor Kent managed to walk beside Marta Mallen, and, without being seen, he contrived to detach his suit-phone—the compact little radiophone case inside his space-suit's neck—and slip it into the girl's grasp.

Compare to the Aerial Telegraph from Garret P. Serviss' 1898 novel Edison's Conquest of Mars, the audiphone from Blood of the Moon (1936) by Ray Cummings and the suit-radio from The Long Way (1944) by George O. Smith.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from The Sargasso of Space
  More Ideas and Technology by Edmond Hamilton
  Tech news articles related to The Sargasso of Space
  Tech news articles related to works by Edmond Hamilton

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