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BlackBerry 10’s spiritual successor could be coming to your Android phone

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Hadlee Simons / Android Authority

TL;DR A developer is building a spiritual successor to BlackBerry 10, called Marathon OS.

This is a Linux-based mobile platform that features BlackBerry 10-inspired features like Active Frames and a Hub inbox.

Marathon OS currently runs on the OnePlus 6, with plans to bring it to the OnePlus 6T, POCO F1, and more.

BlackBerry 10 may have been a failed rival to Android and iOS, but it was an intriguing and innovative mobile platform in its own right. Now, an enterprising developer has decided to build a spiritual successor to BlackBerry 10, and it’ll run on Android phones.

Developer Patrick Quinn has announced development of the Marathon OS project, which he claims will be a spiritual successor to BlackBerry 10. Quinn says the platform will include BB10 staples such as the familiar gesture navigation system, a take on the BlackBerry Hub for a unified messaging/notification inbox, and the Active Frames concept. When it comes to the latter, BlackBerry 10 had a home screen that showed currently running apps as card-based windows, and these windows were still able to refresh in real-time. Marathon OS even features the BB10 peek gesture, which allows you to view notifications with a short swipe up.

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What’s particularly interesting is that this isn’t actually an Android ROM, as it’s based on the Linux-based postmarketOS project. Quinn states that Marathon OS only supports Linux apps, Electron apps, and so-called Marathon apps right now. However, the developer promises that Android app support will be available soon via a forked version of the Waydroid utility for running Android apps in a container.

The encouraging news is that the platform is supposedly up and running on the OnePlus 6 at 60fps, with plans to bring Marathon OS to the OnePlus 6T, POCO F1, existing postmarketOS devices, and more. The developer hopes to deliver “fluid” performance on decade-old chips and “exceptional” performance on modern hardware. Quinn is also planning to enable community ports, so users can bring Marathon OS to devices of their choosing. In a neat touch, Quinn says he’s working with the Zinwa team to potentially bring this platform to the resurrected BlackBerry Classic.

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