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Kyocera

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The Kyocera Headquarters Building in Kyoto, Japan.

Kyocera

Kyocera is a big company from Japan. It started in 1959 in the city of Kyoto. The person who started it was named Kazuo Inamori. In 1982, the company changed its name to Kyocera.

Today, Kyocera makes many things we use every day. They make special parts for solar power, tools for offices, tiny parts for electronics, and even parts for medical treatments. Because they make so many useful products, Kyocera is known all around the world.

Kyocera also makes cameras and phones. They have offices in many countries and always work to create new and interesting technologies. The company's main office is in Kyoto, and it even has solar panels on the roof to help make energy.

Kyocera likes to support sports teams too. They sponsor a team in their home city, Kyoto Sanga F.C., and they also have naming rights for the Kyocera Dome Osaka, where baseball games are played.

Images

An office building for Kyocera Unimerco in Sunds, Denmark.
A Kyocera smartphone model designed for mobile internet use.
An exterior view of Kyocera Dome Osaka, a large stadium in Osaka, Japan.
A sleek silver compact camera model known as the Contax Tix, manufactured by KYOCERA.
A Kyocera wireless router, a device used to connect computers and other devices to the internet.
An early digital camera model introduced by Kyocera in 1997.
A dual-screen mobile phone opened to show both displays.
A 1999 Kyocera VP-210 digital camera on display at the 30th Anniversary Exhibition of the Digital Camera in 2011.
A close-up view of an electronic interface board from a Kyocera printer, showing its components and circuitry.
A Kyocera Finecam SL400R digital camera from 2004, featuring a 1.5-inch LCD screen and a 3.3x zoom lens.
A Kyocera Lynx film camera, a small device used to take photographs on film.
A Kyocera laser printer, a common office device used for printing documents.
A Kyocera 6035 mobile phone showing its design when closed and open.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Kyocera, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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