Google’s trying to form it easier for developers to create Android apps that connect in some way across a range of devices. during a blog post, Google explains that it’s launching a replacement cross-device software development kit (SDK) that contains the tools developers need to make their apps play nice across Android devices, and, eventually non-Android phones, tablets, TVs, cars, and more.
The SDK lets developers do three key things with their apps: discover nearby devices, establish secure connections between devices, and host an app’s experience across multiple devices. consistent with Google, its cross-device SDK uses Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and ultra-wideband to deliver multi-device connectivity.
Google’s Croos-device SDK
Google describes various use cases for its cross-device SDK on its documentation page, and it’s like it could come in handy in many scenarios. for instance, it could let multiple users on separate devices choose items from a menu when creating a gaggle food order, saving you from passing your phone round the room. It could also allow you to pick up where you left off in an article when swapping from your phone to a tablet, or maybe let the passengers in a car to share a specific map location with the vehicle’s navigation system.
It almost seems like an expansion of Nearby Share, which enables users on Android to transfer files to devices that use Chrome OS and other Androids. In April, Esper’s Mishaal Rahman spotted an upcoming Nearby Share update that would let you quickly share files across the devices that you’re signed into Google with. Google also said during a CES 2022 keynote that it’d bring Nearby Share to Windows devices later this year.
The cross-device toolkit is currently available during a developer preview and only works with Android phones and tablets for now. Google eventually wants to increase support to “other Android surfaces and non-Android OSs,” including iOS and Windows, but there’s no word on when this may happen. Since the potential is in its early days, we probably can’t expect to work out apps bridging the connectivity between iOS and Android devices anytime soon. But it’ll be interesting to work out how developers implement the new capability to start, and if it’ll make using certain apps more convenient.