Waterloo Region Record

BlackBerry plans a Detroit splash

CEO John Chen sees top auto show as next stop on road to future, plans product debut Monday

- David Paddon

BlackBerry Ltd., a company increasing­ly focused on technology for the self-driving vehicle market, is making an inaugural visit to North America’s biggest auto show in Detroit, where CEO John Chen’s team says the company will introduce a new product on Monday.

Over the past five years, the chief executive gradually reduced the Waterloo-based company’s dependence on smartphone sales in a crowded market and reposition­ed the company formerly known as Research In Motion as an innovator in cybersecur­ity and software.

Chen sees BlackBerry’s first appearance at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show (NAIAS) — one of the global industry’s major annual show-and-tell events — as the next stop on his road map for the company.

“With cybersecur­ity increasing­ly a focus of automakers and regulators alike, our invitation to address NAIAS is a reflection of software’s primacy in vehicles and our position as a cybersecur­ity leader,” said Chen, who is also BlackBerry’s executive chair.

The company has a lot riding on its BlackBerry QNX division, a formerly independen­t Ottawa-based software developer that’s made inroads with Ford Motor Co. and automotive suppliers around the

world.It’s possible BlackBerry will be able to make a dent in the global auto industry by embedding its software into the next generation­s of automated vehicles, but it is still early days in that market and too soon to tell whether it will succeed.

“I do think they are a top contender (in this field), especially for Canada,” said Alexandra Cutean, director of research for the Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology Council, an Ottawa-based thinktank.

Her research shows the German and American automotive sectors are considered world leaders.

Sweden, the United Kingdom, Japan, France, China, Italy and South Korea are also in the race.

“By comparison, Canada’s approach to audiovisua­l technology developmen­t, as well as progress in intelligen­t transport altogether, has been slow,” said Cutean, author of a recent report on Canada’s automated vehicle industry.

But she did note BlackBerry conducted Canada’s first driverless car trial in October, a significan­t developmen­t for the country’s field.

The world’s automakers may need to work quite closely with technology companies, she said, to ensure there aren’t potential threats from having third-party parts installed in the vehicles.

“We may see more collaborat­ion, just as result of the necessity of this type of technology being integrated with vehicles.”

BlackBerry is a good example of how parts makers are now creating critical components and core elements of vehicles, said Sabrina Bond, who wrote the Conference Board of Canada’s 2018 report on the auto industry.

Other examples include Canada’s two largest auto parts makers Magna Internatio­nal and Linamar Corp. , she said.

“You might see Chinese, Japanese, North American and European parts all integrated into one vehicle in a way that we may not have seen before.”

In fact, BlackBerry has been busily making valuable contacts and friends at every level of the auto industry’s food chain: electronic­s chip makers, Tier 1 parts suppliers and automakers — referred to as original equipment manufactur­ers (OEMs).

Among its major partners is Ford, which agreed in October 2016 to expand the use of BlackBerry’s QNX Neutrino operating system, Certicom security technology, QNX hypervisor and QNX audio processing software.

A few weeks later, BlackBerry was showing off a Jaguar XJ concept car with a new digital cockpit design that combines the infotainme­nt and instrument cluster functional­ity at the 2017 Consumer Electronic­s show.

Since last fall, BlackBerry has announced various arrangemen­ts with some of the world’s most important semiconduc­tor companies, including Delphi, Visteon, Qualcomm, Denso, and Nvidia.

And two weeks ago, Chinese search engine giant Baidu Inc. chose BlackBerry’s QNX safety operating system as a foundation­al piece of the Apollo autonomous driving system, being developed with three Chinese OEMs.

Last week, at the 2018 consumer electronic­s show, BlackBerry used two concept cars from Aston Martin and Range Rover as tangible illustrati­ons of how its QNX software can be used.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? BlackBerry is making an inaugural visit to North America’s biggest auto show in Detroit, where CEO John Chen’s team says the company will debut a new product on Monday.
BEBETO MATTHEWS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BlackBerry is making an inaugural visit to North America’s biggest auto show in Detroit, where CEO John Chen’s team says the company will debut a new product on Monday.

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