A curated list of awesome resources for building applications with Actions on Google and the Google Assistant.
Awesome Actions on Google is a curated list of resources for developers building applications, known as Actions, for the Google Assistant platform. It compiles blogs, videos, codelabs, open-source code, and community experts to help developers learn and implement voice and conversational interfaces. The project solves the problem of fragmented information by providing a single, vetted directory for high-quality learning materials and tools.
Developers and conversational designers who are building or planning to build applications for the Google Assistant using Actions on Google. This includes those working on voice apps, smart home integrations, interactive games, and multimodal experiences.
Developers choose this resource because it saves significant research time by aggregating only the most useful and high-quality tutorials, code samples, and expert insights in one place. It follows the trusted 'awesome list' format, ensuring content is community-maintained and vetted for relevance.
A collection of useful things regarding Actions on Google.
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Aggregates diverse materials like blogs, videos, codelabs, and open-source code in one place, as evidenced by the detailed sections in the README covering everything from Interactive Canvas to smart home integrations.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy with community contributions, ensuring curated quality, highlighted by the inclusion of Google Developer Experts and official codelabs.
Provides step-by-step codelabs and courses from Google I/O and Udemy, such as the 'Build Actions for Google Assistant' series, catering to all skill levels.
Includes a directory of key people to follow, like Jessica Dene Earley-Cha and Joe Birch, offering direct access to updates and best practices from influencers.
As a GitHub repository, updates depend on community contributions, which can lag behind rapid changes in the Actions on Google platform, risking outdated links or missing new features.
Lacks built-in forums or Q&A mechanisms; developers must seek help elsewhere, as the list only provides passive resources without real-time assistance.
Exclusively targets Google Assistant, making it irrelevant for multi-platform voice development and creating vendor lock-in for those exploring broader conversational AI.