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Blackberry to synch with Android apps as RIM seeks sales boost

Rolling Meadows-based Research In Motion Ltd., seeking to boost the appeal of its BlackBerrys and revive slowing sales, plans to enable models expected next year to run applications built for Google Inc.'s Android operating system, three people familiar with the plan said.

BlackBerrys that run on RIM's new QNX software will be Android-compatible, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the effort isn't public. RIM has said it plans to introduce QNX phones in “early” 2012.

Rolling Meadows-based RIM is rebuilding its range of devices around QNX and is looking to add features that appeal to customers who had grown weary of the aging BlackBerry portfolio and its narrower selection of apps. There are more than 250,000 apps available from Google's Android Market, or about six times as many as in RIM's App World, a factor in helping Android become the world's top smartphone platform.

“Being able to run Android apps, that's a big plus,” said Steven Li, a Raymond James Ltd. analyst in Toronto with an “outperform” rating on the stock. “If you get the tonnage of Android apps and the top 50 apps through BlackBerry's App World, that addresses many of the concerns people have about RIM's ecosystem.”

A handful of models that RIM introduced this month were its first new phones in a year, a gap that caused the BlackBerry to lose ground. Its share of the global smartphone market fell to 12 percent in the second quarter from 19 percent a year earlier, according to Gartner Inc. Over the same period, iPhone maker Apple Inc. climbed to 18 percent from 14 percent, and Android rose to 43 percent of the market.

The Android app player in the new BlackBerrys is the same one that has been built for the PlayBook, and it is being tweaked to fit the different screen size and resolution of various BlackBerry models, one of the people said.

RIM plans to have the Android player installed on the QNX phones when they go on sale and not in an upgrade, to avoid criticisms that software upgrades were too slow to come, the person said.

The PlayBook was criticized on its debut in mid-April for its lack of a built-in e-mail system and a dearth of apps compared with Apple's more popular iPad.