Android allows applications to publish views to be embedded in other applications. These views are called widgets, and are published by "AppWidget providers." The component that can contain widgets is called a "AppWidget host."
For more information, see the AppWidgets documentation in the Dev Guide.
{@more}Any application can publish widgets. All an application needs to do to publish a widget is to have a {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver} that receives the {@link android.appwidget.AppWidgetManager#ACTION_APPWIDGET_UPDATE AppWidgetManager.ACTION_APPWIDGET_UPDATE} intent, and provide some meta-data about the widget. Android provides the {@link android.appwidget.AppWidgetProvider} class, which extends BroadcastReceiver, as a convenience class to aid in handling the broadcasts.
Widget hosts are the containers in which widgets can be placed. Most of the look and feel details are left up to the widget hosts. For example, the home screen has one way of viewing widgets, but the lock screen could also contain widgets, and it would have a different way of adding, removing and otherwise managing widgets.
For more information on implementing your own widget host, see the {@link android.appwidget.AppWidgetHost AppWidgetHost} class.