Editor's Review
Stepping on a scale usually just makes me feel bad. This one at least gives me data to work with. I paired it with the OKOK app, and it tracked my body fat, muscle, and water alongside weight. The food and sleep advice feels generic, but the trend charts helped me spot real progress.
What' s new ?
1. Intermittent fasting tool is online! Easily manage fasting time to help with weight loss and health. 2. Added \"My Food Library\" function, customize and build your personal food library. Update now for a new healthy experience!
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OKOK International Official Introduction
OKOK Healthcare Management, an application for use with the smart Bluetooth
scale, records and manages your body weight measurement results. With this APP,
you can use the Bluetooth scale to check and manage various health indices for
body weight, body fat, body water, muscle and etc. Though mainly used for body
weight control, this APP utilizing your health indices also give you advice on
everyday sport, food and sleep.
The necessary permissions for the application's functions are as follows:
1. Nearby Device Permission. This permission is required for functions such as binding and connecting Bluetooth devices like weight scales, nutrition scales, watches, and jump ropes.
2. Location Information Permission. On systems below Android 12, this permission is required for functions such as binding and connecting Bluetooth devices like weight scales, nutrition scales, watches, and jump ropes.
3. Photo and Video Selection Permission. This permission is required for functions that require selecting images from the photo album, such as adding food pictures and changing the user's profile picture.
4. Read Contacts Permission. This permission is required for functions that require syncing phone contacts to the watch device.
5. Camera Permission. This permission is required for functions that require using the camera, such as scanning QR codes and barcodes, taking photos of the user's profile picture, and taking photos of food.
6. Calendar Permission. This permission is required for functions that require reading and writing to the system calendar, such as weight reminders and water intake reminders.
7. Notification Permission. This permission is required for functions that require using the system notification bar, such as intermittent fasting notification bar reminders.
OKOK International Tips
Let’s cut the crap—Shenzhen Careyou Health Science and Technology Co’s OKOK·International ain’t your average health app. It’s a straight-up, no-fluff tool for anyone looking to track their health, stay on top of fitness goals, and keep tabs on daily habits—perfect for folks who want simple, reliable health management without the extra junk. Don’t let the “health app” label bore you; it’s got all the key features you need, no overcomplicated stuff that makes you wanna quit. Core deal? Track steps, monitor activity, log meals, and sync health data—all in one easy-to-use app. I messed around with it for a few days to test its kinks, so here’s the raw truth on if it’s worth your space, plus the no-BS tips new users need to stop fumbling with it early on.
First off, the vibe: it’s no-nonsense, user-friendly, and great for anyone—whether you’re a fitness newbie or just wanna keep track of basic health. Unlike some health apps that overload you with charts and jargon, this one keeps it simple. The interface is clean, with clear tabs for activity, meals, and data—no confusing menus that make you scroll forever. It runs smooth on every Android phone I tested, even older ones, and syncs fast without glitching. Fair warning: it’s not a magic fix—you still gotta put in the work, but it makes tracking way easier.
Now, real talk on pros and cons. The good: it’s dead simple to use—even my 60-year-old dad figured it out in 5 minutes. Auto-sync works great, the interface is clean, and it’s free for basic features (no paywall to track steps or log meals). It’s light on your phone’s storage, too—no massive downloads needed.
The bad: free version has ads that pop up every now and then, which gets annoying. Some advanced features (like detailed health reports or custom meal plans) are locked behind a paywall. Also, it doesn’t integrate with as many fitness trackers as some other apps—just the basic phone sensors.
