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#1 |
Expert Member
Feb 2007
Colorado Springs, CO
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I know my thread on Toshiba slashing its prices along with a few other threads have got closed. I think it is very important for the blu-ray team to lower their prices or do something to counter their move otherwise HD-DVD is going to still be around, and our chances of getting Universal and Paramount may be even longer. One thing that will help our competition is their very low prices even if it is a move of desperation. If they can get enough people to buy their product like it or not they arent going anywhere.
Toshiba Calling price "the most critical determinant" in reaching mainstream consumers, Toshiba announced an immediate drop in the MSRP for its complete line of third-gen HD DVD players, pricing its 1080i entry-model HD-A3 player at $149.99, the HD-A30 at $199.99, and the high-end HD-A35 at $299.99. Paramount and Universal and especially Toshiba don't care about confusing the market, and possibly making both HD formats obsolete, their #1 concern is money and being as ruthless as it takes to get their point across as we have all ready seen with their $150 million dollar payouts and misleading press articles on how well their discs and products have sold. Last edited by Porfie; 01-14-2008 at 05:45 PM. Reason: spelling |
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#3 |
Expert Member
Feb 2007
Colorado Springs, CO
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Price may be over-rated but not over-rated enough to stop many people from buying their product. I think blu-ray has enough support to defeat HD-DVD however we all knew that Toshiba was going to do this fire sale as a last attempt to save theie dying format. My point is I hope blu-ray does not just depend on the Warner Bros exclusivity and just do nothing. I want blu-ray to go to bat for us and do some great sale of their own.
Last edited by Porfie; 01-14-2008 at 05:38 PM. |
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#4 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Not yet they won't. Now that WB is on their side, it is clear what will happen.
However they will have to to compete against DVD. The prices are too close b/t HD DVD and BD to matter, but between BD and DVD... in order to make better sales the prices will need to drop. |
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#5 |
Blu-ray reviewer
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I do no think that price is overrated given the state of our economy. But I also believe that it is quality that wins over pricing with content now firmly in the BR camp.
The BDA does not need to pointlessly keep slashing prices. Certainly not at this moment. Accelerate the introduction of a variety of 1.1/2.0 players, address the kinks (Samsung) with their 1.0 players, as much as possible, and focus on education. Slashing prices without education will not deliver the needed results. Educated public with a clear vision of what BR offers over SDVD will. Dr.A |
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#6 | |
Special Member
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I think this firesale is a last ditch effort to clear out their inventory before Universal and Paramount go to Blu-ray exclusively. |
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#7 | |
Power Member
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HD DVD has had cheaper hardware since it came on the market---and it came on the market months before BD. What do they have to show for it so far? An argument that goes something like this: "It doesn't matter that HD DVD is losing because losing doesn't matter."
Now these are some juicy sales numbers: Quote:
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#8 | |
Expert Member
Feb 2007
Colorado Springs, CO
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#9 |
Member
Nov 2007
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We've all benefitted from the format war - BD software and hardware prices are surely lower than they would have been had there been no HD-DVD.
The one 'bad' aspect of HD-DVD's demise is that BD will no longer be under that competitive pressure with respect to price, quality, etc. |
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#10 | |
Member
Jan 2008
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Anyway, Bluray's war is no longer with HD DVD (to the extent it ever really was). The war BD has to win is against SD DVD. For the average person going in to a shop to buy a disk player, faced with the choice between a $50 (or £50) SD DVD player that upscales and a £500 (or £500) BD player, there is no choice at all. They will choose the £50 player pretty much every time, unless they have a really, REALLY compelling reason. Bring the player price nearer to $200-$300, where some better SD DVD players still retail, and start to sell the advantages of the interactivity & the HD content and you'll get more buyers. It's simple stuff. I think BD manufacturers have 2 ways to go at this point: 1. Decide that they have "won the war" against HD and put prices up to match demand, since they've cornered the HD market. 2. Realise they have a war to win against SD players, ramp up their production volumes and drive down cost as a result. One option leads to a firm hold on an expensive niche market, the other leads to a genuine mass market product with a real future supported by studios. |
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#11 |
Member
Jul 2007
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possibly but toshiba is desperate and scared since warner is abandoning them they think dropping player prices will help sales but they lost warner the bda should however consider doing some minor price drops to compete with dvd player sales.
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#14 | |
Expert Member
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I couldn't disagree with the end of your statement anymore than I already do!!! We will continue to have the best pricing and quality period. You get what you pay for. |
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#15 |
Special Member
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This is a pointless conversation, it's a firesale and nothing less. They tried the same tactic back before the holiday shopping season, and it failed miserably. This time it's a last-ditch effort to recover what money they can on their format before it's officially dead. I could care less how little they charge for it, as it only has 30% studio support. Why would I pay any money towards an HD DVD player when it is ultimately no more than an up-converting DVD player at this point? The industry, insiders, and retailers have all weighed in on where the future of HD media is, and it's Blu-ray. Anyone that has heard any news of the two formats knows at this point which format will be the future, and will not buy into a dead format just because it's cheap. HD DVD is in its death-throes, and will stop kicking soon enough. Enough with this "doom-and-gloom" FUD...
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#17 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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PQ...
Where can we get the best possible PQ at this point in time? DVD? No. Satellite HD? No. Cable HD? No HD DVD? No. Blu-ray? Yes! For anything in life, if one wants the best, one usually has to pay a premium to get it. Now, with HD DVD choking and dying, Blu-ray will have a new pricing competetor - DVD. Seeing as DVDs are $15-$20 each, and BDs with "6 Times The Resolution" are $24-$34... I'll live with Blu-ray prices. DVDs upscaled do look pretty good, but not as good as a Blu-ray. Period! More and more people are getting new TVs. Even on a 720p set, BD is better than upscaled DVD. 1080p sets are dropping in price nearly everyday. NO ONE can deny that Blu-ray playing on a native 1080p set kicks ass. 2008 is starting to look better and better, ya know? ![]() |
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#18 |
Senior Member
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May be it's their way of getting rid of their stock.
With WB switching side is already telling poeple that they're dead. By doing this people are just gonna make poeple assume that it's really dead. You know like one of those store closing sales, everything must go. |
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#19 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The HD format war was won by Blu-ray by having better studio support, period. This begets more unit sales, which begets more market share. Just look at Warner, who cited this truth as their reason for going Blu exclusive. I'm not saying price is immaterial... it will no doubt play a large factor in getting SD lovers to adopt Blu. But Blu has kept extremely competitive in unit prices with HD-DVD, and player prices don't have a large enough disparity to matter. |
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#20 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Supply and demand guys. Prices drop when they reach near market saturation for that price range. While it is good that hardware will be cheaper to make with each passing year, not all of that is being passed onto consumers.
I'm not terribly worried about it. CD was this expenisive too, but it came down in price. Just a matter of time. |
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