A curated list of Firebase talks, tools, examples, articles, and community resources.
Awesome Firebase is a curated list of resources for Google's Firebase app development platform. It compiles official documentation, community tools, libraries, examples, talks, and articles to help developers learn and use Firebase services effectively. The project serves as a centralized directory to discover everything from SDKs and extensions to tutorials and best practices.
Developers and teams building applications with Firebase, including web, mobile, and game developers, as well as those interested in serverless backends, real-time databases, and cloud services. It's especially useful for those seeking to explore Firebase's ecosystem beyond official docs.
It saves developers time by aggregating high-quality, vetted Firebase resources in one place, eliminating the need to scour the internet. The list is community-driven, regularly updated, and categorized for easy navigation, making it a trusted reference for both beginners and experienced Firebase users.
🔥 List of Firebase talks, tools, examples & articles! Translations in 🇬🇧 🇷🇺 Contributions welcome!
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Curates official Firebase docs, quickstarts, extensions, and hundreds of community tools in one place, eliminating scattered internet searches.
Includes resources for web, mobile (iOS/Android/Flutter/React Native), games, and server-side development, as shown in the categorized contents.
Regularly updated with featured new releases like Firebase App Check and modular SDKs, ensuring relevance with Firebase's rapid evolution.
Offers translated versions in Korean and Russian, broadening access for non-English speakers, as noted in the translations section.
Lists hundreds of resources without prioritization or ratings, making it difficult for beginners to identify the most effective tools or tutorials.
Lacks interactive features like search or filtering, relying solely on manual browsing through categories, which can be inefficient for specific needs.
As a community-driven project, some links or resources may become outdated if not actively monitored, despite contributing guidelines.