In the interest of not overly nerding up the story, the basic gist is that the upcoming BlackBerry PlayBook tablet—which we learned about back in September of last year—runs a new (for BlackBerry) operating system called QNX. Moving forward, BlackBerry phones will eventually run the same QNX operating system, too.
In the interest of making QNX backwards-compatible with applications built for current-generation and older BlackBerry phones, the new operating system will contain what's known as a "virtual machine." It's basically software capable of running older applications as though they're running on different hardware—in this case, older BlackBerry handsets.
Well apparently one of the virtual machines, or VMs, that BlackBerry's considering building into its QNX operating system is known as Dalvik. And wouldn't you know it, Dalvik is the same virtual machine used by the Android operating system. According to BGR.com:
"Here is the big news: we have been  told RIM is very much considering the Dalvik virtual machine, and we  ultimately expect the company to chose Dalvik. If that sounds familiar  to you, it's because it's the same VM that the Android OS uses, and it  would allow RIM's PlayBook and other QNX devices to run just about any  application built for the Android platform.
There are various approaches to this  situation — one where RIM uses the open source Dalvik VM and does not  involve Google, and another (incredible) scenario where RIM and Google  might reach an agreement (basically 'certify' the device/platform) that  would provide official support to Android apps on RIM's QNX-based OS,  and would feature the Android Market, Google's Gmail, Maps, and other  apps."
This sounds too simple and too good to be true, but imagine the implications.
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