{"componentChunkName":"component---src-templates-blog-post-js","path":"/blog/blackberry-s-market-share-has-eroded-but-qnxs-trump-card-could-be-security/","result":{"data":{"site":{"siteMetadata":{"title":"No Frills News"}},"contentfulNfnPost":{"postTitle":"BlackBerry's market share has eroded, but QNX’s trump card could be security","slug":"blackberry-s-market-share-has-eroded-but-qnxs-trump-card-could-be-security","createdLocal":"2021-05-13 14:30:54.699282","publishDate":"2021-05-13 09:18:08-04:00","feedName":"Connected Car","sourceUrl":{"sourceUrl":"https://canada.autonews.com/technology/blackberrys-market-share-has-eroded-qnxs-trump-card-could-be-security"},"postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>But analysts and QNX itself suggest a more promising outcome, with BlackBerry already taking on a new, larger role as car-computer traffic cop.\n“We saw this coming years ago,” said Grant Courville, BlackBerry QNX’s vice-president of products and strategy.\n“We saw infotainment becoming much more consumer-centric, and I should really say much more application-centric,” Courville said.\nQNX responded with products such as Hypervisor, which puts firewalls between operating systems running on the same hardware to prevent any problem from spreading.\nA key selling point, BlackBerry believes, is its long-standing reputation for reliability that led then-Michigan-based Delphi Automotive to seek out QNX software for the U.S. supplier’s nascent infotainment systems in the 1990s.</p>"}}}},"pageContext":{"slug":"blackberry-s-market-share-has-eroded-but-qnxs-trump-card-could-be-security"}}}