The Kyocera Hydro Reach has a 5-inch, 960-by-540 display. It's easily visible in direct sunlight, but has poor viewing angles. Affordable. Waterproof. Good outdoor screen visibility. Loud earpiece ...
An ice bar isn't how we'd choose to showcase a water-resistant smartphone, but that's just what Kyocera did at CTIA this year for the Hydro Edge. At the time, Sprint and Boost Mobile had set a loose ...
We got our hands on the Kyocera Hydro Edge back in May (as well as the Hydro XTRM), with the word being at the time that it would be rolled out to the US market soon. Several weeks later, and both ...
It's summertime, time for absent-minded running through the sprinkers with your smartphone in your back pocket. Thankfully, if you can hold out for a few more weeks without having some prankster toss ...
Boost Mobile today announced that it will sell the Kyocera Hydro starting August 3 for $129.99. The Hydro, which was announced earlier this year, is a water-proof Android 4.0 smartphone that includes ...
After unveiling it during CTIA 2012, Kyocera finally announced that its newest waterproof Android 4.0 handset, the Kyocera Hydro, will be available on Boost Mobile's network starting August 3. Though ...
This morning, Boost Mobile announced a new device that’s hitting their lineup. Which is the Kyocera Hydro Icon. It’s a $149.99 smartphone that is water-resistant and features a 4.5-inch qHD display, ...
Boost Mobile today announced the pending availability of the Kyocera Hydro Icon. The device is the latest in Kyocera's line of water-resistant Android smartphones, but goes one step further by meeting ...
Boost Mobile announced today that it will be the first US retailer to offer the low-end, waterproof Kyocera Hydro. The Hydro has a 3.5-inch display, runs Android 4.0 on a 1GHz Snapdragon processor, ...
Boost Mobile on Monday announced its latest Android-powered smartphone, the waterproof and dust-proof Kyocera Hydro Icon. Powered by Android 4.3 Jelly Bean, the Hydro Icon is an entry-level handset ...
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Bertel is a Linux user who likes budget smartphones more than flagships, uses a custom ROM, and gets his apps from F-Droid. When he isn't writing short stories for Android Police, you might find him ...