“LLMs are only as good as the context you give them.”
Google just dropped a public preview of the Developer Knowledge API and an MCP server to go with it. The pitch is simple: a machine-readable gateway to Google’s official developer docs. No scraping, no outdated info, just the real stuff pulled directly from firebase.google.com, developer.android.com, docs.cloud.google.com, and the rest.
Here’s what you get:
- Search and retrieve docs as Markdown
- Freshness - docs get re-indexed within 24 hours of updates
- Coverage across Firebase, Android, Cloud, and more
The MCP server is where it gets interesting. MCP is that open standard that lets AI assistants tap into external data sources cleanly. Hook it up to your IDE or agentic tool and suddenly your AI can answer questions like “What’s the best way to implement push notifications in Firebase?” or “How do I fix that ApiNotActivatedMapError?” with actual, current documentation backing it.
But here’s the thing: is MCP actually better than just having a good API or a well-designed CLI? MCP adds another layer, another protocol, another thing to configure and debug. For a developer who knows what they’re looking for, typing firebase deploy or clicking through developer.android.com is often faster than asking an AI to route through MCP and generate a response. The API is the real workhorse here. The MCP wrapper is nice-to-have, not essential.
That said, if you’re building AI-powered developer tools for less technical users, or you want a natural language interface to Google’s docs, this is one to keep on your radar. The docs are live and the API is in public preview.
Source: Hacker News | Original Article