In 1984, Lazaridis, then yet a student, responded to a general
call for proposals from
General Motors (GM) to develop a "network computer control display system". GM awarded him a contract in response to his proposal. He dropped out of university, and with the GM contract, plus a small government grant and a loan from Lazaridis's parents,
Mike Barnstijn,
Douglas Fregin and he launched
Research in Motion (RIM), the company whose assets are now managed as BlackBerry Limited. One of RIM's first achievements was the development of
barcode technology for film. It reinvested the profits from that product into
wireless data transmission research, eventually leading to the introduction of the
BlackBerry wireless mobile device in 1999, and its better-known version in 2002. Lazaridis would serve in various positions for RIM and BlackBerry, including as co-chairman and co-CEO of BlackBerry from 1984 to 2012, and Board Vice Chair and Chair of the Innovation Committee from 2012 to 2013. In 1999, Lazaridis parted with a third of his fortune (at the time), to provide CA$100M to establish an academic research enterprise focused on theoretical physics, thereafter named the
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, for which he formed a Board, and recruited
Howard Burton as its first Director. He would also serve as Perimeter's board chair. In 2002, he provided the vision and funds that led to founding of the
Institute for Quantum Computing at the
University of Waterloo (UW), under UW faculty member,
Raymond Laflamme. to "provide financial and intellectual capital for the further development and commercialization of breakthroughs in
Quantum Information Science". == Philanthropy ==