Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Based on the extracted page content, The Harrison App looks more like a live or demo Web dashboard than a complete marketing site. Its core revolves around an AWS Dashboard, with modules such as Cost & Usage, EC2 Instances, S3 Buckets, and Network Activity, plus the ability to refresh data. In the developer tools category, its main value is helping cloud development, operations, or platform teams view AWS resources and network activity in one place.
The clearest capability shown in the text is network activity analysis: the app uses VPC Flow Logs and Route 53 Resolver Query Logs, retrieves results through CloudWatch Logs Insights, and displays ingress / egress volumes, top talkers, rejected flows, DNS queries, as well as traffic summary and traffic over time. This suggests it is more of a visualization and troubleshooting interface built on top of AWS-native logs, rather than a general-purpose APM or full-stack observability platform. There are also backend admin elements such as Premium Requests, Pending/Approved/Rejected, Todos, Active Users, user avatars/names/emails/roles/registration and last login information, as well as a “3D MRI Viewer,” but the page text does not explain how these modules relate to AWS monitoring.
The captured content does not provide pricing, plans, free trial details, payment methods, or enterprise edition information, so its business model and value for money cannot be assessed. In terms of integrations, the only confirmed connection is with the AWS ecosystem, involving EC2, S3, CloudWatch Logs Insights, VPC Flow Logs, and Route 53 Resolver Query Logs. There is no mention of common DevOps integrations such as GitHub, Slack, PagerDuty, Terraform, or Kubernetes, nor does it state whether an API/SDK is available.
Its advantage is a focused use case: if a team already uses AWS and needs to quickly understand VPC traffic, rejected connections, and DNS queries, the dashboard structure appears straightforward. The drawbacks are also clear: the public page content is mostly repeated interface-state text, with little explanation of product positioning, installation and deployment, permission model, security, log query cost control, or data retention policy. It is also not disclosed whether it is open source, self-hostable, or supports multiple accounts / regions.
It may be worth trying for AWS users, cloud operations teams, SREs, or development teams that need network troubleshooting. Access from China cannot be determined from the text; in addition, using AWS global regions from mainland China may involve network, account, and payment differences related to connectivity and compliance. Alternatives include AWS CloudWatch, Cost Explorer, Grafana, Datadog, or OpenSearch Dashboards.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on harrison.app official site.
harrison.app is an Unknown Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach harrison.app directly.