@TitaniumRolo For me I’ve been able to text chat to my team and see game chat aswell we just haven’t been able to type in the game chat so I wonder if we’ll be able to switch channels to both now
Everyone’s chasing the robotics trade through $NVDA. They’re missing the company that sits underneath Nvidia. $BB.
BlackBerry closed Friday at $7.91, up ~19% in a single session after a Q4 report that ripped the mask off the story bulls have been telling for months: this is not a dead phone company. It’s a robotics and physical-AI software company that the market spent five years pricing as a relic.
The catalyst has a name: QNX.
QNX is the layer that doesn’t get to fail
QNX is a real-time operating system — the deterministic, fault-tolerant software that guarantees a command executes on time, every time. It’s certified to ISO 26262 ASIL D, the automotive industry’s highest functional safety standard. When a machine has to move in the physical world without killing anyone, this is the layer that makes that safe.
It’s already embedded in 275M+ vehicles worldwide — confirmed by Counterpoint Research, up 100M in five years. BMW, Mercedes, Toyota, Honda, Bosch, VW. This isn’t a pitch deck. It’s a shipping, royalty-based, recurring-revenue business.
And it’s working: QNX did $78.7M last quarter — over half of all BlackBerry revenue — $268M for the full year, with a royalty backlog around $865M. The company just posted its fourth straight profitable quarter, its first such streak in roughly a decade.
The thesis: cars were the rehearsal. Robots are the show.
A humanoid robot has the exact same non-negotiable requirement as an autonomous car — a machine that perceives, reasons, and physically acts cannot run its control loop on a best-effort OS. It needs determinism and fault tolerance. That is precisely what QNX is built for, and precisely what general-purpose Linux is not.
This isn’t theoretical anymore. At Embedded World 2026 in March, QNX put a QNX-powered humanoid robot on the floor — picking up randomly placed objects, transferring them between trays, coordinating two arms with camera-based tasks in real time. They also launched the General Embedded Development Platform (GEDP), built to let robotics teams ship safety-critical machines faster. Management is now openly framing robotics and industrial automation as the next automotive — the same demand curve, a brand-new market.
The proof the skeptics can’t argue with
Nvidia’s Drive Thor — the compute platform powering autonomous vehicles and intelligent machines — runs QNX. Nvidia’s own automotive VP has publicly called QNX the OS foundation for Thor’s highest levels of safety and security.
Read that again. The “AI brain” the whole market is paying a $5T valuation to own? In safety-critical deployments it frequently runs on top of QNX. BlackBerry sells the foundation the foundation is built on — and it trades at a $4.6B market cap.
Where it goes from here
The market just woke up Friday. One 19% day doesn’t price in a robotics TAM that isn’t in a single analyst model yet. The auto base alone — 275M vehicles, $865M backlog, four profitable quarters — arguably justifies the current price. The robotics and physical-AI optionality is, at these levels, close to free.
The honest note: after the pop this is no longer a deep-value bargain, and QNX robotics revenue still has to show up as an actual line item — that’s the number to watch on the next earnings print. But if you believe humanoids and industrial autonomy are the next decade, $BB lets you own the certified, deterministic OS layer underneath all of it, in a stock the market is only just starting to re-rate.
The relic trade is over. The platform trade is just beginning.
Not advice. Do your own work.
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