Kyocera Rise Specs

5.0
PhoneArena Score
Kyocera Rise Review
6.4

Description

The Kyocera Rise is running on Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich and is aiming for the budget-conscious customer. The Rise features a slide-out QWERTY kyeboard, 3.5-inch HVGA (320x480 pixels) display, 1GHz single-core processor, 512MB of RAM, a 3.2-megapixel camera and a 1,500mAh battery.

This device is also known as Kyocera C5155

Pros

  • Hardware QWERTY keyboard

Cons

  • Thick body (0.56 inches)
I want it 6 users
I have it 10 users
I had it 12 users

Popular Comparisons

The Kyocera Rise is most commonly compared with these phones:

Specs Compare

Display

Size: 3.5 inches
Resolution: 480 x 320 pixels, 165 PPI
Technology: IPS LCD
Screen-to-body: 53.38 %
Features: Ambient light sensor, Proximity sensor

Hardware

System chip: Qualcomm Snapdragon S2 MSM8655
Processor: Single core, 1000 MHz
GPU: Yes
RAM: 0.5GB
Internal storage: 2GB
Storage expansion: microSDHC
OS: Android (4.0) Screenshots
Device type: Smartphone

Battery

Capacity: 1500 mAh
Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable

Camera

Rear: Single camera Camera samples
Main camera: 3.2 MP
Flash: LED
Video recording: Yes
Dimensions: 4.45 x 2.38 x 0.56 inches (113.0 x 60.5 x 14.3 mm)
Weight: 4.23 oz (157.0 g)
Features: Full keyboard
Keys: Left: Volume control
Colors: Black

Multimedia

Headphones: 3.5mm jack
Speakers: Earpiece, Loudspeaker
Features: Album art cover, Background playback

Connectivity & Features

Bluetooth: 2.1, EDR
Wi-Fi: 802.11 b, g, n
USB: microUSB, USB 2.0
Features: Mass storage device, Charging
Hearing aid compatible: M4, T4
Location: GPS
Sensors: Accelerometer, Compass
Other: Computer sync, OTA sync

Phone features

Notifications: Music ringtones (MP3), Polyphonic ringtones, Vibration, Flight mode, Silent mode, Speakerphone
Other features: Voice dialing (Speaker independent), Voice commands (Speaker independent), Voice recording, TTY/TDD

Regulatory Approval

FCC approval:
Date approved: Jul 06, 2012
FCC ID value: V65C5155
Measured SAR:
Head: 1.14 W/kg
Body: 1.01 W/kg
Simultaneous Transmission: 1.50 W/kg
Wireless Router: 1.27 W/kg

Availability

Officially announced: May 08, 2012
Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Kyocera Rise specifications, there is always a possibility of admitting a mistake. If you see any wrong or incomplete data, please

LET US KNOW.

If you are interested in using our specs commercially, check out our Phone specs database licensing page.

News

User Reviews

Overall User Rating
Build quality
8
Camera quality
3.6
Performance
5.6
Display
6
Battery life and charging
6
Rating breakdown (out of 10)
3
Not even fit for beta testing...over 3 years since it was released
Phone owned for less than a year

This thing is so bad, I will never buy another Kyocera product again. I'm pretty sure it wasn't even designed by engineers, I think they deployed the thousand monkeys locked in a room technique on this one.

Pros: It has a physical QWERTY keyboard

Cons: Everything else

Let's see, there's the random reboots, it does that one about 4-5 times in a day.

There's the can't run 2 programs at once crash, which happens 95% or so of the time you try to run 2 apps at once. This one is especially awesome because when you are attempting to enter data by that physical keyboard it requires a system app to do it. That system app, plus another app (like say the webbrowser) will crash back to desktop almost always. Really awesome that despite having a physical QWERTY, you can't actually use it most of the time.

There's the inexplicable frozen but not frozen mode, in which the phone acts like you've started 4 major apps, but nothing is actually running, and what you are telling it to run runs at about 10% speed.

There's the blank screen freeze, in which the phone is turned on, but the screen will not turn on no matter if the slider is open or closed, or how many times you hit the unlock button. To fix this one you have to yank the battery.

There's the wireless with a mind of its own bug. This one is where the wireless turns itself back on within 30 minutes of turning it off. I've checked my apps, they aren't doing this. It happens so frequently that within a week of owning this "phone" you will give up trying to turn the wireless off, and just delete your networks so it doesn't have anything to actually connect to when it does it.

The biggest gripe though, and this kind of goes back to the memory leak issue where this thing runs at 10% is that I miss 50+% of all phone calls because by the time the phone reacts to you hitting the accept button, the phone call has already been sent to voicemail. This thing is so useless, it can't even reliably perform its base function let alone anything else a smart phone is supposed to do.

You are probably reading this and thinking it can't be that bad. Well, it's your money, but I don't want to hear any crying when you didn't listen.

Let me put it this way, some of you may be computer users for a while. Do you remember Microsoft Windows, Millennium Edition? This phone will make that and a computer of the same time period look like some sort of NSA supercomputer. It's bad man, I just don't have the words.

Why am I posting a review of a 3 year old phone? #1 Virgin is still selling this junk, and simultaneously deleting reviews that inform just how big of a pile this thing is. #2 It's really the only thing with a physical QWERTY I could find.

If you are reading this, and happen to work for Motorola, please light some fires under the guys making the Droid 5. This is tiring. I am not going to buy a phone unless it has a physical QWERTY. That is a non-negotiable. Please save me from Kyocera.

Read Full Review
6
Terrible Reception
Phone owned for less than a year

The phone would be wonderful if you could actually use it regularly. Bad reception causes many problems and often it is just unusable. I have had the phone for six months and while it is very durable, I often find that I can not use it in my home unless it is up against a window. I usually have to go outside to use it properly.

Read Full Review
3
Worst Phone ever!
Phone owned for less than a year

Screen shuts off even after setting it to go off after more then a minute. If you are on hold or check your bank account , etc. by pushing different buttons you have to continuiosly slide the keyboard open to get it back! It is very easy to accidentally call the last number you dialed, google who knows what, and end up on all different screens. The volume button is on the side so it is very easy to turn the volume down. I dont hear my phone rining! Worst of all, I had to dial 911 and it wouldn't let me get through with out pushing a bunch of other screens! I called virgin mobile about it. They sent me this reconditioned phone. The volume it terrible on speaker, cant take pics with text, in addition to all the previous problems mentioned. Reception is below average , cant get any in basements, blind spots in my house, dropped calls. ca't send texts sometimes, tells me full number with area code is imcomplete yet I can recieve texts on that number.

Read Full Review
FCC OKs Cingular\'s purchase of AT&T Wireless