Feb 22, 2011 10:25 GMT  ·  By

Canadian mobile phone maker Research In Motion is on its way to bring to the market a new BlackBerry device, the already official PlayBook, which packs a wide range of capabilities, including support for stereoscopic 3D visuals.

The device was caught on video while outputting stereoscopic 3D on a larger display, and one should agree while looking at the video embedded at the bottom of this article that things look pretty impressive.

The video comes from Inside BlackBerry, which explains a little more on the matter in a recent post, noting that this video is in line with a series of BlackBerry PlayBook tablet applications being demoed by The Astonishing Tribe (TAT) at Mobile World Congress 2011.

They mention the ‘Scrapbook’ app demo, along with BlackBerry WebWorks videos, all of which were meant to showcase the main capabilities of the device.

These demonstrations were meant at showing “the power the BlackBerry PlayBook platform has for providing a rich application experience,” and the new video is included in this series as well.

As stated above, in the video below, you will see the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet capable of outputting stereoscopic 3D content.

The video also shows that this was not possible if it weren't for a series of features the device includes, such as 1080P HD visual capabilities, micro HDMI output, and multi-touch support.

“It’s also really cool to look at, whether you’re wearing 3D glasses or not! Check it out and let us know what you think of the possibilities of the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet,” the blog post continues.

RIM packed the new device with some of the latest advancements in the industry, in an attempt to deliver to shelves a tablet PC capable of competing with Android and Apple devices.

With a dual-core application processor inside, a 7-inch touchscreen display, 3G, WiFi and even 4G capabilities in some models, the PlayBook would certainly manage to appeal a lot to end-users.