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RIM says it has plans for Blackberrys to work seamlessly in vehicles

MONTREAL — Research In Motion Ltd. (TSX:RIM) is teaming up with carmakers to make its BlackBerry smartphones work more seamlessly in vehicles, says co-CEO Mike Lazaridis.

MONTREAL — Research In Motion Ltd. (TSX:RIM) is teaming up with carmakers to make its BlackBerry smartphones work more seamlessly in vehicles, says co-CEO Mike Lazaridis.

That hinges on making it easier to use the short-range wireless technology Bluetooth to pair the BlackBerry smartphone with the vehicle, Lazaridis said Friday.

“So what we have been doing is working closely with companies like Toyota, Lexus, BMW, Mercedes, you name it, Audi,” Lazardis told the TDNewcrest technology conference in Toronto.

“We have been working with all of these companies to make sure that our Bluetooth is seamless, that when they add features they don’t break the operation, when we add features we don’t break the operation,” he said via a Webcast.

“We’re working together to a more seamless integration.”

The Waterloo, Ont., company announced it recently bought Ottawa-based software company QNX Software Systems, which has a real-time operating system for information, entertainment and navigation systems in vehicles.

Lazaridis said the QNX acquisition will help RIM achieve that goal because it’s already working with automakers, but gave few other details.

“There’s some stuff I can’t talk about today that we can now do together.”

Lazaridis noted that the BlackBerry is already automatically connected to Toyota Camry models, adding it can play music from the device and show playlists.

IDC senior analyst Kevin Restivo said the BlackBerry and the car are going to be much more integrated.

“I think in the very near future we will see the Blackberry interoperate with the guts of a car a lot more easily than it has in the past,” Restivo said from Toronto.

“The primary benefit for Research In Motion is to break down that last frontier where the Blackberry has not typically been used and that, of course, is the car,” said Restivo, lead analyst for IDC’s mobile phone tracker program.

But Restivo noted that without Bluetooth technology “knitting” this together, it would be much more difficult to achieve in vehicles.

He noted the BlackBerry could end up unlocking car doors and said there’s potential for hundreds, if not thousands of other applications.

“First and foremost, it makes talking on the Blackberry in a car a lot easier and probably a lot safer experience in the near future. It makes it potentially a more hands free experience, for example, if its syncing up with your dashboard.”

Ontario and some other provinces have banned the use of cellphones while drivers are operating a car, opening up a new market for hand-free communications devices.