Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Google I/OT: Brillo is the company’s Internet of Things platform

Add as a preferred source on Google

Right now, you might find a Brillo steel wool pad on your sink, but thanks to Google, Brillo will be all over your home later this year. The company announced its new “underlying operating system for the internet of things,” which it’s calling Brillo, at Google I/O.

Google has “taken Android and polished it down” to its core essentials, according to Sundar Pichai, Senior Vice President. This means it can run all devices with a smaller footprint but still supports Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Low Energy, and Thread.

Recommended Videos

Pichai also introduced Weave, a common language that lets devices talk to each other, the cloud, and your phone. Because it’s cross-platform, Weave works with Brillo. A command that means “unlock” to your smart door lock means the same to all your other smart devices. Google will introduce a Weave certification program, so all devices will be able to communicate, regardless of their developers.

Not only will your devices be able to talk to each other, you’ll be able to talk to your devices, thanks to voice commands. “We hope we can connect devices in a seamless and intuitive way,” said Pichai.

Pichai credited Nest for Google’s introduction to the smart home. “Nest has been working hard at taking traditional devices in the home and reimagining them for users,” he said. Google purchased Nest for $3.2 billion back in January 2014. There were hints of smart-home voice control in December of last year when users could start using Google Now to command their Nests.

Developers will get a preview of Brillo in Q3, and Google will release it in Q4. While Pichai mentioned specifically being able to turn on your oven from your Android device, he also imagines farmers being able to control everything on their land, from cameras to sensors. Google’s at the beginning of its journey when it comes to the Internet of Things, said Pichai.

Jenny McGrath
Former Senior Writer, Home
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
I tried to parody the most absurd AI products, but the tech industry beat me to it
The joke was supposed to be that every household object gets cameras, AI insights, and a premium tier. Apparently, that’s now a business plan
Imaginary AI products

I wanted to invent an AI product so silly that no founder could turn it into a seed round.

It had to solve a problem nobody had, collect far more data than the problem deserved, and turn normal behavior into an insight that sounded vaguely disappointed in its owner. Somewhere around the third feature, it would ask for a subscription.

Read more
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer review: A massive, gorgeous dryer with one AI-sized asterisk
The LG SIGNATURE DLEX8900B is a beautiful dryer with a AI brain and plenty of capacity. Just be ready to pay a premium and take over from time-to-time.
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer

View at LG

Quick Review

Read more
Fraimic’s E Ink art frame generates art from your voice and looks incredible doing it
Fraimic's AI art canvas is one of the most thoughtfully designed smart frames I've come across.
Indoors, Interior Design, Person

We’ve seen a lot of "smart art frames" at CES over the years. Most of them feel like glorified digital photo frames in turtlenecks. However, there’s one that feels genuinely different: Fraimic, and I say that as someone deeply skeptical of this category.

The pitch appears quite compelling at first. Speak a prompt into the device, and its built-in mic sends the command to OpenAI's GPT Image 2.0, which then generates full-color artwork that lands on a Spectra 6 E Ink display. 

Read more