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Product Review: Tawkon… and on… and on…




Tawkon App for iPhone and Blackberry

 

Product Reviewed: Tawkon (www.tawkon.com) version 1.0.1 tested on a BlackBerry 9700 (Onyx).

 

The upshot: While documentation and online help for purchasing and troubleshooting are still sketchy, Tawkon is a remarkable application, and comes as close as I’ve ever seen to achieving the Holy Grail of “Set It and Forget It” as any application out there. Tawkon should be considered a vital utility for every mobile phone.

 

Tawkon describes itself as “a mobile phone application that gives users information and tools to avoid mobile phone radiation as much as possible, with minimal disruption to normal phone usage.”

 

Go back and read that sentence again. There are an awful lot of promises packed into that claim:

 

[1] a software application for your mobile phone (not a hardware measuring gadget); [2] delivery of information about your phone’s radiation emissions from its various radios; [3] tools to help you minimize exposure to cell radiation; and [4] a usable interface that lets you get on with your calls. 

 

Does Tawkon deliver?

 

[Disclaimer: After some initial difficulties purchasing and activating the application, Tawkon provided me with the application and asked me to test and review it.]

 

I’ve been using Tawkon for a week on a BlackBerry 9700 (Onyx). Navigating to the Tawkon website [http://www.tawkon.com/m] on my phone’s web browser, I clicked the big green PayPal button. This took a leap of faith, actually, since no price was noted (Tawkon costs $9.99) and I associate big buttons like that with “one-click” purchases. I clicked anyway. Much to my surprise, I was taken to BlackBerry’s AppWorld and the message “This application is not available on your device or for your carrier.” Hm.

 

I wasn’t sure what to do, so I just closed the browser and gave up.

 

Within hours, and much to my surprise, I received a classy email from Tawkon, thanking me for my interest and asking about my experience downloading and using the application. This was a first for me, and tipped me off to the fact that the Tawkon team is serious — really serious — about getting the user experience absolutely right, every step of the way.

 

Who could resist a letter starting, “As a young start up, we’re eager for constructive feedback…”? I wrote back: “Today I finally got my AT&T Blackberry 9700 working with my Orange (Israel) SIM. Tried to download Tawkon, and got a message that it’s not compatible with my phone or my operator. Don’t know which. So, I’m disappointed.”

 

Four hours later, I got a personal email reply from a real person — one of the company’s founders. After some troubleshooting, he explained that the problem was that I had chosen to purchase via PayPal, which meant purchasing through BlackBerry’s App World store, which is not supported in Israel (who knew?). Instead, I needed to click the other green button, and opt to pay using my credit card via the Mobihand store. Purchasing via Mobihand was indeed quick and easy.

 

Obviously, this gateway to purchase is confusing and difficult to use, and Tawkon will have to make sure that customers see only relevant buying options, or they will lose many bewildered customers along the way…

 

…which would be a pity. Because once the aches and pains of getting to the right web page to purchase Tawkon were over, and once the application was installed (important — and undocumented — note: you need to restart your BlackBerry after installation in order for Tawkon to launch properly! You can tell if it’s working by checking for the Tawkon mini-icon in the top margin of the BlackBerry home screen), everything went as smooth as silk.Tawkon has done this application right. They have obviously put a lot of thought into making the application function seamlessly, so much so that it’s hard to believe this is just a first release. Once they cross a few T’s and dot a few I’s, you’ll never guess this is a start-up. Tawkon feels like a mature mobile app from an experienced first-tier company.

 

I launched Tawkon from the Downloads folder on my BlackBerry, and was taken directly to a Tawkon Prediction screen that scanned my system and reassured me that my phone’s radiation levels were low. The Real-Time Radiation Indication Bar is liquid mercury; it’s so sensuous and fluid you’ll want to walk around mapping your radiation environment just for the pleasure of making the colors flow.

 

Keeping that screen open, I placed a call from my cell phone to my landline and took a tour of my home. (When you’re not on a call, Tawkon scans using a “Prediction Mode”. When you’re on a call, Tawkon goes into “Call Monitoring Mode”.) The results? My home and office are in good shape, although I won’t be making any calls from the bathroom. It’s just as well.

 

In fact, you don’t even have to open the Tawkon application to see your phone’s emission status. That little mini-icon on the home screen changes color from green to yellow to red to cue you in, say, before you even make a phone call.

 

Where Tawkon really shines is when you’re on the move. Most of the time, I never even noticed that Tawkon was there, running automatically in the background. But when I answered a call sitting in a mall café — bzzz. I walked into an elevator while deep in discussion — bzzz. My phone vibrated and a message appeared on the screen, an alert from Tawkon that my phone was emitting high levels of radiation. I switched to a bluetooth headset or the built-in speakerphone and was pleased to see that Tawkon registered the change and let me know that it was helping. Tawkon also records the emission patterns during calls, letting you go back to review your call history to see how much you were exposed to — or avoided exposure to.

 

How the heck does Tawkon work? Tawkon says it monitors and analyzes your mobile phone radiation as a function of  three key parameters: your phone’s specific absorption rate (SAR) – different for each phone model; environmental conditions – rural versus urban area, mobility, and distance from a cellular base station, terrain, etc.; and personal phone usage – the way the user holds the phone, distance from the user’s head or body, etc.

 

How reliable is Tawkon’s feedback? I’ll have to leave it to someone with a lab equipped to independently check Tawkon’s results against their own measurements. (Tawkon claims to have tested its results in collaboration with In4Tel, a strategic partner.) What I can say is that the feedback makes sense. Tawkon buzzed me in places where my phone would be expected to boost its power to get a signal — in elevators, enclosed stairwells and basements.

 

What is the impact on battery life? I don’t know how to gauge that, but I would expect it to be minimal, since Tawkon is a software solution. I spent a day at a convention and used my BlackBerry heavily all day for email, some long calls, Bluetooth radio on (WiFi was off), taking pictures of slides and constant Twittering during panels and sessions, and still had plenty of battery life left at the end of the day even though Tawkon was running in the background.

 

How does Tawkon know what it knows? Beats me, but I feel a lot better with Tawkon installed. You can read up on WHO’s most recent findings regarding cell phone emission risks here. I set out to purchase Tawkon because I wanted to feel some sense of control over my mobile risk:reward ratio.

 

The upshot: While documentation and online help for purchasing and troubleshooting are still sketchy, Tawkon is a remarkable application, and comes as close as I’ve ever seen to achieving the Holy Grail of “Set It and Forget It” as any application out there. With the risks of cell phone emissions still unclear, Tawkon should be considered a vital utility for every mobile phone.

 

Tawkon is a keeper. It’s earned a home on my phone.

 

PROS:

 

  • “Set it and forget it” convenience
  • Gorgeous interface
  • Responsive, helpful customer service straight from the development team.
  • Provides valuable information about what’s going on in your hand and near your head.

 

CONS:

 

  • Instructions are not part of the application (you can find information in videos posted at Tawkon.com and on YouTube here and here, but it’s up to you to find them).
  • Purchasing process become confusing if you’re outside the BlackBerry App World zone. (I guess it’s an “App Region”, not an “App World”, yet.)

7 Responses to “Product Review: Tawkon… and on… and on…”

  1. Rashi Says:

    Hey Sarah

    Thanks for the review - and glad you had a good experience with tawkon.

    You asked about impact on battery - the good news is, not only does it not consume battery resource, it actually conserves battery because by encouraging you to use your phone more efficiently (it’s a side benefit that most excited Scobleizer in his post & video interview here: http://scobleizer.com/2010/05/17/mobile-phone-radiation-studying-company-might-have-real-side-benefits/

    Thanks again

    Rashi (marketing consultant to tawkon)

  2. Pete Abilla Says:

    The application sounds interesting and that a lot of thought went into its development, but here’s what I’m missing:

    why should we care about being exposed to mobile phone radiation?

    Even their website doesn’t answer that question and Techcrunch’s review doesn’t address that question either?

    Put another way,

    Tawkon is a solution to what problem?

    “mobile phone radiation” isn’t enough of an answer unless exposure to that type of radiation is similar to exposure to nuclear radiation. The point is that the consequences of exposure to mobile phone radiation is largely unknown.

    Tawkon - tell us the harm mobile phone radiation can cause to humans and the environment. Tell us why we should care.

    Nice review - Tawkon should send you schwag for it.

  3. admin Says:

    Rashi — Thanks for the battery use info. I’ll have to look at the interview again (I don’t remember that issue coming up in the video I saw and linked to on YouTube).

    Pete — I’m with you. Still, I’ve seen just enough to convince me (so to speak) that the data aren’t convincing either way on the side of danger or safety. Which concerns me. So I do take some steps to reduce exposure, like using a headset (exposure limited to Bluetooth) or speakerphone for longer calls.

    For now, I feel that using Tawkon is a reasonable effort (hence the set-it-and-forget-it value — if I had to launch the app each time, it would be a non-starter for an unconfirmed risk).

    If Tawkon can get an independent lab to confirm correlation between their technology and absolute emissions from the phone, that would make the case even stronger for its value, at least until more medical evidence is in (which could take 20 or 30 years).

    Good to hear from you!

    Sarah

  4. Amit Lubovsky Says:

    Sarah,
    thanks for taking the time to review our app and provide your thorough feedback – much appreciated!

    Amit Lubovsky
    Co-Founder and VP R&D, tawkon

  5. ima2seven Says:

    Thank you for the review. I am planning on going over to a smart phone in November, and will definitely install this. Since you did such a good job, I am wondering if you have a strong opinion about blackberry vs. droid vs. iphone? I have been asking as many people as I can, because I am really not sure which is the best way to go.

  6. admin Says:

    Hi, ima2seven! Thanks for your comment.

    I’ve posted my opinions (very strong ones!) here, in response to your questions about how to know which smartphone is best for you:

    http://www.reallysarahsyndication.com/2010/08/22/which-smartphone-is-right-for-me/

    It all boils down to what features you will use the most. Even small differences in convenience add up if they are for functions you access 10 or 12 times a day. If this is your first smartphone, you may not even be sure what you’ll use the most. You may want to borrow one from a friend, or take the cheapest offer going, or buy a used phone, to give yourself a chance to find out how you’ll actually use the thing!

    Sarah

  7. David Says:

    Sounds great always wondered about cell phone use
    looks like it is avail for android going to give it a try!

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