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#1 |
Power Member
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Check out this article I found on CSMonitor.com
Blu-ray sales are stagnating. What’s to blame? By Matthew Shaer | 06.22.09 Print this Letter to the Editor Republish Email and shareGet e-mail alerts RSS These are grim days for Blu-ray, a technology once heralded as the future of high-definition home video. According to a new poll from Harris Interactive, although the sales of HDTVs has continued to climb, the overwhelming majority of Americans have not yet bought into the Blu-ray craze. The results of an April survey show that 93 percent of adults in this country still have not purchased a Blu-ray player, down only three percent since May of 2008. (The survey does show that some consumers use video-game systems such as the Sony PlayStation3 to play Blu-ray discs.) Internationally, the news is no better. The global video business lost somewhere north of $2.6 billion in 2008 alone, says trade publication Screen Digest, amid slackening sales and limited discretionary spending. Who’s to blame? Milton Ellis, Vice President and Senior Consultant, at Harris, said in a statement that Blu-ray, particularly, is facing stiff competition from cable, satellite, and the Web. “Consumers today can easily watch high definition TV channels or use the Internet or video-on-demand to access high definition movies,” he said. “In the near future, access to high definition movies may be a download or streaming delivery of one’s favorite movies to a home media server that eliminates the need for a Blu-ray player and Blu-ray disc.” At the same time, the file-sharing practices that decimated the record industry are threatening to cut into video sales – thousands of hi-definition movies and TV shows are available for free, if you know where to look. An uptick? Over at PC World, David Coursey writes that, “most of us will end up with Blu-ray, because it comes as part of whatever we purchase next, be it a computer or video player.” But the numbers from Harris aren’t particularly reassuring – at least in the short run. Of the 2,401 Americans surveyed, only 25 percent planned to switch to Blu-ray completely, and 43 percent want prices to come down significantly before they invest. More sobering still, only 21 percent of Americans appear to be replacing or duplicating their existing standard format DVD library with Blu-ray format, Harris said. |
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#3 |
Member
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sounds to me lake that guy is talkin out of his rear... I know lots of people that have blu-ray players and lots of blu-rays. I live in Toledo Ohio and its hard to find certain movies on blu-ray a couple days after their release.
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#5 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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In all honesty the article looks like it was written based purely on some ones point of view and thre in some stats to try and justify it. |
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#6 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I don't understand how even though it's adoption rate is faster than DVD's adoption rate, even in the face of an economic crisis, it's considered a doomed format.
And even though digital download market for films is miniscule and laughable, especially compared to BD, people see it replacing everything in a few years. It doesn't make sense. Also, tons of people still buy CDs. |
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#8 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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#9 |
Blu-ray Champion
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Or blame the economy. I know quite a few people who might have gotten into Blu if not for the uncertain economy forecast for the next couple years. Many of them are interested in the technology and HDTVs who still haven't bought their first HD set. The fact is they are also not sure if they still have their jobs 6 months from now. So they are better off just stay put.
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#10 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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#12 |
Power Member
May 2009
Florida
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Evrytime I read a Poll about anything technology related, I can find 3 other polls that state the opposite. Sampling 2500 people out of 300mil will not give you an accurate reading, demographics, household income, level of education can change an outcome easy. The only "POLE" I care about has a stripper attached to it.
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#13 |
Senior Member
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Signs that this article is BS.
!. When I want to rent a New Release Blu-ray from Blockbuster, I have to get there before NOON on Tuesday cause they will be out. 2. The people at Best Buy say the economy is not really hurting them and they see BD players sales on the rise. 3. Expanded selection of BD at Target and Walmart. |
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#14 | |
Power Member
May 2009
Florida
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#16 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#17 | |
Power Member
May 2009
Florida
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#18 | |
Expert Member
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True HD Streaming Likely Years Away, Says Report 2 July 2009 1:48 PM, PDT It is likely to be at least five years years before high-definition movies can be streamed to home theaters with the same resolution as Blu-ray discs, according to a study by PriceWaterhouseCoopers and reported on the Video Business magazine's website. Although millions of homes are already connected to video services that claim to offer HDTV titles, via streaming, the quality doesn't even match that of standard DVDs and the "flow" is sometimes jerky. The problem in many cases is that most consumers' broadband connections are too slow to stream HD video which ideally requires an 18- to 20-megabits-per-second connection. (The average broadband subscriber's connection is about 2.5 mbps.) Meanwhile the video subscription service ZapMyTV has signed a deal with Paramount that will allow it to offer to its online customers such relatively new films as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Hotel for Dogs and such classics as Breakfast at Tiffany's and Ghost. http://www.imdb.com/news/ns0000003/#ni0861923 I swear, every time I hear a doom for Blu-Ray story, it makes me sick with worry and disgust. Worry, that they may be right, disgust, that Blu-Ray seems to be a punching bag. I also don't get why people have problems with discs. They're safer than computer files. If anything happens to your computer, your whole collection is done for. If something happens to a Blu-Ray disc, you only lose one movie/couple of episodes. I swear, these Blu bashings have to stop. |
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#19 | |
Power Member
May 2009
Florida
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#20 | |
Hot Deals Moderator
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