This is ostensibly designed for companies building custom hardware, but you don't need pro engineering skills to get started. Android Things already works with Intel's Edison, Raspberry Pi 3 and NXP's Pico, so you can whip up a Google-powered gadget with minimal effort.

Appropriately, Google is improving Weave itself. There's a new device developer kit for certain kids of hardware (lights, switches and thermostats right now), and Weave devices can hook into services like Google Assistant. And it's only going to get more ambitious: in addition to more device developer kit support, Google will both offer tools to help write mobile apps and merge its own take on Weave with Nest's version. Between this and the Android Things release, it's evident that Google doesn't want to sit on the sidelines while Microsoft and others make their own IoT platforms. It wants Android at the heart of many of your connected devices, and that means removing as many hurdles as possible.