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Old 09-16-2007, 02:00 PM   #1
jorg jorg is offline
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Default General public aware of Blu-ray? More than some think

ka so i was at a party last night and a bunch of pople were talking about i pods or something and and bunch of the real hard partyers brought of "that blu-ray disc" stuff i just about sh!t my paints and most of them new about it while these are only 16 year old teenagers and stuff and probly wont even buy a blu-ray player its good to know that people are getting to know about blu-ray\.

im starting to think that he web is doing a huge job of advertising blu-ray(and hd dud).

just thought id be nice for pople to know
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Old 09-16-2007, 02:07 PM   #2
w_tanoto w_tanoto is offline
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good to hear that..

what I am doing right now is improving wikipedia article about BD to increase public awareness that BD is better. needs help.
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Old 09-16-2007, 02:27 PM   #3
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yes w_tanoto iv been folowing some of yours posts and im glade to hear that sorry im not helping my grammer isent up to standered
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Old 09-17-2007, 07:47 AM   #4
w_tanoto w_tanoto is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jorg View Post
yes w_tanoto iv been folowing some of yours posts and im glade to hear that sorry im not helping my grammer isent up to standered
glad to hear you're following wiki.

I'm also shocked that actually Indonesia, recently has legalised BD distribution in Indonesia, and a lot of talks and votes goes to BD, considering it's third world country. No HD DVD, Indonesia is 100% blu, while Japan is almost 100% (94.8% blu as of march 2007)
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Old 09-20-2007, 02:46 PM   #5
PaulGo PaulGo is offline
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Sep 19, 2007 13:00

High-Definition Discs and Video Players: Industry Must Do More to Motivate Consumers, but Opportunity for Growth is Abundant

The NPD Group examines consumers' intent to purchase and awareness of high-definition video players and video content
PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y. --(Business Wire)-- Sep. 19, 2007 The NPD Group reported today some reasons for the slower than expected start of high-definition video players and high-definition content sales (i.e., HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc). NPD's new High Definition Video Report Series examines consumer awareness, ownership, usage patterns, and intent to purchase high-definition players and content, since these new technologies were introduced last year.

Among those who currently own HDTVs, half (52 percent) are familiar with the availability of high-definition DVD players, but only 11 percent expressed strong intentions to buy one in the next six months. Seventy-three percent of HDTV owners reported that their current traditional-format DVD player still works well for them, so they do not need to replace it; while 62 percent said they are waiting for the prices of high-definition players to fall. The format battle rages on

According to NPD, consumers' knowledge of the HD DVD format is more prevalent than for the Blu-ray Disc format. While 29 percent of respondents were aware of HD DVD, just 20 percent had heard of Blu-ray Disc. Consumers who purchased a Blu-ray Disc player reported that they did so because they believed it was superior to HD DVD; while those who purchased an HD DVD player did so because the price was lower than a Blu-ray Disc player.

"As HDTV penetration continues to grow, manufacturers and studios will need to do a better job imparting the benefits of these formats to a consumer base that still reports a high satisfaction with the current DVD standard," said Ross Rubin, director, industry analysis, consumer electronics.

Familiarity with the latest formats is primarily coming from exposure to marketing - especially television commercials. Forty-one percent of consumers who say they are familiar with Blu-ray Disc players and content gained awareness through ads and commercials. The same is true for HD DVD (42 percent). Nearly one-in-five consumers reported learning about the devices from friends and family. The high-definition DVD content conundrum

Difficulty in communicating the high-definition message is compounded by the relatively small amount of available content in either of the two formats. NPD's research shows that the overwhelming majority of DVDs purchased by high-definition owners are standard definition (64 percent); however, the primary reason consumers reported buying a traditional DVD was that the high-definition disc was not available.

"Early adopters aren't choosing to evangelize high-definition players to others, in large part because they are unhappy with the available selection," said Russ Crupnick, vice president and senior entertainment industry analyst. "The good news is that the industry can address this concern by releasing HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc titles more aggressively."

One encouraging signal for the industry is that existing HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc consumers are trading up from standard definition. According to NPD, early adopters plan to replace nearly a quarter (23 percent) of their current collections with high-definition format DVDs (either HD DVD or Blu-ray Disc), and there is an appetite for more.

Methodology

For NPD's High Definition Video Player Report Series, more than 5,500 adults were surveyed between June 18 and June 28, 2007. Among the sample were 542 pre-identified owners of high-definition players and high-definition capable video game consoles.
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Old 09-20-2007, 02:58 PM   #6
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Interesting, but I fail to see how that shows that more people know about Blu-ray. I think it is sad that so many know of HD-DVD most likely cause the name is close to DVD, and also sad that so many are happy with SD DVDs.
Why did they spend that money for an HDTV if they are not even going to use it?!
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:04 PM   #7
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Age <35: PS3/XBOX/iPod generation, seem to be in the know about, have disposable income to spend on HDM.

Age >35: largely clueless, busy raising families, over-mortgaged on credit card debt and can't afford right now anyway.
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:08 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Manco View Post
Age >35: largely clueless

Being over 35 I find this comment to be "LARGELY CLUELESS"
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:15 PM   #9
Joe Cain Joe Cain is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jaymzbo View Post
Being over 35 I find this comment to be "LARGELY CLUELESS"
+1
Busy raising a family here, as well...
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:17 PM   #10
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I think Being over 50 would be a more accurate comment. Example, my grandparents have a VCR hooked up to a 50" plasma. They also send SD cable to the tv, no HD
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:19 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jaymzbo View Post
Being over 35 I find this comment to be "LARGELY CLUELESS"
Being 43 I can tell you my large circle of friends in the same age group are clueless about Blu-ray right now. They are more worried about how to make their next mortgage payment and pay for their kids college. "Getting into Blu-ray" is the farthest thing from their minds. You and I are in the very small percentage of people in this age bracket that find this "cool" at them moment. They are completely indifferent to the matter. And talk about the format war, they could care less about Blu-ray v. HD-DVD.

You may not agree with my opinion, but I'm just telling facts from real life experience.

Last edited by Manco; 09-20-2007 at 03:23 PM.
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:27 PM   #12
jaymzbo jaymzbo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Manco View Post
Being 43 I can tell you my large circle of friends in the same age group are clueless about Blu-ray right now. They are more worried about how to make their next mortgage payment and pay for their kids college. "Getting into Blu-ray" is the farthest thing from their minds. You and I are in the very small percentage of people in this age bracket that find this "cool" at them moment. They are completely indifferent to the matter. And talk about the format war, they could care less about Blu-ray v. HD-DVD.

You may not agree with my opinion, but I'm just telling facts from real life experience.

Point taken and from my experience with the people I know, the indifference seems to run across generations. I just felt like I was being stereotyped with your earlier comment and am glad you took the time to clarify.

Sorry to hijack thread
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:29 PM   #13
Rustmonsteru Rustmonsteru is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jorg View Post
im starting to think that he web is doing a huge job of advertising blu-ray(and hd dud).
I think the BDA needs to do some serious advertising and public awareness work; HD DVD certainly is. Google "Blu-ray" and the first thing that pops up is a sponsored link for HD DVD's official site.
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:32 PM   #14
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i think many of the public doesn't know ps3 is a blu-ray movie player even when they have 1 sitting right in their living room.
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:35 PM   #15
Manco Manco is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jaymzbo View Post
Point taken and from my experience with the people I know, the indifference seems to run across generations. I just felt like I was being stereotyped with your earlier comment and am glad you took the time to clarify.

Sorry to hijack thread
No problem. I understand where you are coming from. My fault for using wrong language.

I just want the forum to know that there is a big generaion gap right now in HDM adoption and the PS3/XBOX gen really "gets it". Seems the 40 crowd is big on getting massive plasmas in their homes but it stops right there. You start taking about Blu-ray and I get the dumb "deer caught in the headlights" looking back at me. I just want to clock my friends over the head. They just don't get it.
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:36 PM   #16
EuLoGY EuLoGY is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jaymzbo View Post
Being over 35 I find this comment to be "LARGELY CLUELESS"
Being under 35 I find it hilarious being that im not over mortgaged and have a growing BD library, and all the goodies that go with a HD set up! But everyones entitled to their own opinion, however clueless it may be hahahha
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:47 PM   #17
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Most of the people I know who have a dedicated Home Theater are well over the clueless age mentioned above.
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