A recent survey by BlackBerry Limited finds tensions between innovation, project deadlines, and functional safety. Credit: Elnur / Shutterstock Developers and software engineers face mounting pressure to balance rapid innovation with safety and security, says software provider BlackBerry Limited. The company released the results of its survey of 1,000 embedded software developers and engineers worldwide on October 8. The survey found growing tensions between meeting tight project deadlines and maintaining functional safety, according to the report. The research is pertinent to the company’s BlackBerry QNX real-time OS and software for embedded systems. BlackBerry found that 75% of respondents acknowledge that urgency often forces them to compromise on key safety requirements. While developers cite security (54%), cost control (52%), and safety certifications (48%) as their top considerations when selecting an operating system, the survey also highlights significant downstream challenges in these areas that have made the vast majority (74%) of respondents open to changing their existing OS. Of those who must meet international safety standards, 61% say it is extremely or very challenging to meet these specific standards with their current operating system. Security concerns (36%) and lackluster performance issues (28%) are two main reasons respondents are considering changing their current OS. Open source operating systems are the preferred foundational platform for almost half (44%) of developers, with an additional 25% indicating no preference between open source and proprietary offerings. Open source platforms often are adopted within development environments due to familiarity with the technology and open availability. But these do not carry the same safety certifications as many proprietary options that go through rigorous verification and testing to achieve validation and verification, BlackBerry said. Developers are under pressure to meet deadlines and budgets, which is why pre-certified software is important to enabling organizations to meet goals without compromise, according to BlackBerry. The survey also revealed that nearly a third (31%) of all respondents admitted their OS lacked the necessary safety certifications or only had some of them covered. Security also remains a pain point for developers, particularly for open source operating systems, which are more likely to experience a breach. BlackBerry is promoting its own BlackBerry QNX portfolio as helping safety certification, reliability, and reduction in development time. Related content feature What is Rust? Safe, fast, and easy software development Unlike most programming languages, Rust doesn't make you choose between speed, safety, and ease of use. Find out how Rust delivers better code with fewer compromises, and a few downsides to consider before learning Rust. By Serdar Yegulalp Nov 20, 2024 11 mins Rust Programming Languages Software Development how-to Kotlin for Java developers: Classes and coroutines Kotlin was designed to bring more flexibility and flow to programming in the JVM. Here's an in-depth look at how Kotlin makes working with classes and objects easier and introduces coroutines to modernize concurrency. By Matthew Tyson Nov 20, 2024 9 mins Java Kotlin Programming Languages analysis Azure AI Foundry tools for changes in AI applications Microsoft’s launch of Azure AI Foundry at Ignite 2024 signals a welcome shift from chatbots to agents and to using AI for business process automation. By Simon Bisson Nov 20, 2024 7 mins Microsoft Azure Generative AI Development Tools news Microsoft unveils imaging APIs for Windows Copilot Runtime Generative AI-backed APIs will allow developers to build image super resolution, image segmentation, object erase, and OCR capabilities into Windows applications. By Paul Krill Nov 19, 2024 2 mins Generative AI APIs Development Libraries and Frameworks Resources Videos