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#221 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I would think if your Oppo had issues, you could find a mod'er in Taiwan or HK who could not only fix it but modify it to optimize performance and play any region BD, if you so desired.
I'm curious to hear the Marantz now that it outputs DSD over HDMI. I always liked Marantz design, but the sound has let me down every time I auditioned one. Oppo is the way to go. |
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#222 |
Blu-ray Count
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#223 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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#224 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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The industry should have had a marketing campaign that made the case that if you weren't listening to SACD and especially if you weren't listening to SACD 5.1 (or DVD-Audio 5.1), then you weren't hearing the music the way it was intended. At the very least, this would have helped the fight against illegal downloads and it also would have helped the change in the market from an album market to a singles market (assuming they didn't release any 5.1 singles), which is what's killing the business today. And the fight between SACD and DVD-Audio didn't help. Consumers don't buy when they're confused (just as Blu-ray didn't take off until DVD-HD died.) The industry learned that back in the vinyl Quad era. I never saw an SACD setup or a 5.1 setup in a single record store. For the average consumer on their cruddy home systems, they simply couldn't hear the difference between CD and SACD. Besides, consumers have always opted for convenience over quality and downloads are more convenient. But had 5.1 been properly demonstrated, there is a big WOW factor and people would have bought (IMO). But it rarely was (and in fact, still rarely is.) Most electronics stores have walls and walls of TVs, but they're rarely hooked up to any kind of sound system. And when they have HDTV "listening rooms", they're rarely operating properly or inviting to average consumers. They should always have something "cool" playing with a big sign stating, "come on in and listen to the state of the art". But in most electronics stores, they give you dirty looks if you walk into their listening rooms. This is why the non-esoteric audio industry is in such bad shape. But let's say you're correct: that Sony did do a good marketing job on SACD. So then consumers were aware of the product and voted with their dollars: they didn't want it. End of story. The RIAA reports SACD, DVD-Audio and analog cassettes (!) together because the numbers are so small. In 2009, only 100,000 units were sold in the U.S. representing $4 million in revenue at list price. That's NOTHING. Even vinyl sold far more and in spite of the hype, vinyl sales are nothing more than a rounding error. Vinyl sold 3.2 million units representing $60 million in revenue at list price. That's out of a $7.7 billion U.S. industry (which, incidentally, is half of what it was in 1999). |
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#225 | ||
Blu-ray King
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Thanks for all the suggestioins. Pretty much comes down to Sony or Marantz BD/SACD player.
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But if someone want to give me an Oppo from America, I can send you my address. ![]() The new Marantz UD7006 looks nice. ![]() Quote:
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#226 | |||||||||
Blu-ray Samurai
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If you think you can successfully market SACD to a consumer market, you should put together a business plan and pitch it to investors but I don't see a way to do it profitably. Last edited by Gremal; 05-25-2011 at 07:24 AM. |
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#227 |
Super Moderator
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Consumers won't buy into a format involved in a format war. Having to buy two players to support the new formats was a killer, not having a single format was a killer.
.mp3 can shoulder a lot of the blame, but a format war will always = going nowhere. |
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#228 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Not sure that makes sense either or BD audio would be catching on, as it has no real competitor now. It depends on consumer need. VHS vs Beta war resulted in home video being implemented with VHS as the consumer choice. HD DVD vs Blu-ray resulted in BD as the consumer choice. In SACD vs DVD-A, far fewer DVD-A titles were released and DVD-A had less traction and the format war ended. Yet SACD did not get enough traction either. Why? Simple: MP3 was the consumer choice. Consumers didn't see a need for high res or multichannel audio at a time when they were increasingly listening to music through ear buds.
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#229 | |
Super Moderator
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The SACD/DVD-A format war never ended, the major studios just excused themselves. The same thing would have happened with Blu-ray/HD DVD if Warner had not dropped HD DVD and all that would be left would be Sony releases until even they drop out leaving niche releases only. Consumers didn't choose Blu-ray until Warner chose Blu-ray, then a chain of events including major retailers choosing sides allowed the format to start seeing adoption numbers worth mentioning. Until then 2:1 only mattered to early adopters like us, in reality Blu-ray's market share was under 5%. It was a fun way to rebut unhappy HD DVD fans claiming "but the consumer did choose Blu-ray 2:1" but it was just being facetious, I don't think anyone would be foolish enough to suggest either format was heading anywhere without WB choosing sides and allowing the format war to continue. SACD's lopsided number of available titles is because of classical and jazz releases, the pop/rock genre they were fairly even Stevens. |
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Blu-ray Samurai
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#231 | |
Expert Member
Dec 2008
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#232 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#233 | ||
Super Moderator
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SACD and DVD-A failed because of the format war. Done properly Blu-ray will not fail as a mass market adopted music format. No-one has suggested Blu-ray will be more popular than downloads, where are you coming up with this stuff? Quote:
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#234 |
Blu-ray Prince
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If the music labels understand the diminished expectations in term of sales, I see Blu-ray audio as having a chance at establishing itself as at least an option for consumers. I do not see it being mass market like selling 100,000 units, but could see popular, new releases doing decent numbers on the format.
The road will be tough and long, hopefully Warner commits some resources to it. |
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#235 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Sep 2008
Bainbridge Island, WA
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SACD and DVD-Audio failed for a number of reasons - among them: the format war, the requirement of dedicated players and complicated set-ups, the small installed base of home surround systems, the convenience/portability of other formats, and the lack of interest in high quality playback.
High resolution audio on Blu-ray has some advantages - among them: no competing formats, no new players or set-ups required, and a growing number of home theater systems. But, it still faces the challenges of convenience/portability and the public lack of interest. We are several years into Blu-ray now and the small number of music releases is discouraging. While some of us would love to see BD Audio take off, it's looking like another niche market. |
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#236 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#237 | |||||
Super Moderator
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In the first half of 2010 there were three times as many album sales on CD vs. digital downloads. With singles included CD still dominated revenue compared to digital downloads. Nielsen Soundscan data, first half of 2010. Overall album sales: -11% (compared to Q1~2 2009) Physical album sales: -17.7% (112 Million units sold) Digital album sales: +13.7% (42 Million units sold) Almost three times as many albums sold on CD vs. DD. By comparison physical album sales dropped around 30% in 2007, so the bleeding has gone down over the last couple years rather than up surprisingly. Individiual track sales: -0.2% (597 Million songs sold) Vinyl album sales: +9.1% (1.3 Million units sold) Despite the decline in percentage, I don't think anyone would call over a billion dollars woth of sales in six months (if you take a lowly average of 9.99 price point for CD's) being "trounced". End of year data. http://www.billboard.com/news/u-s-al...04137859.story Quote:
CD album sales - 239.9 million DD album sales - 86.3 million If WB announces support of downloadable HR tracks only then clearly there will be no place for Blu-ray. I hope they will announce support for Blu-ray music releases because I believe the market will support it far more readily than they supported two formats embroiled in a format war with expensive players (plural) that required more complex connecitons. Blu-ray - sub-$99 players, $5 HDMI cable, biggety-bam. Last edited by dobyblue; 05-26-2011 at 01:21 PM. |
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#238 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Downloads are not really succeeding, they are just cheap for the labels to implement. The music industry is a shell of its former shelf, as digital downloads are not replacing the lost revenue from the decline in physical media.
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#239 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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I don't agree with it. I love SACD, wish it had replaced regular CD's in terms of adoption. But it didn't and it won't. And neither will BD-A. Last edited by Pondosinatra; 05-26-2011 at 06:36 PM. |
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#240 |
Super Moderator
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But Blu-ray doesn't need to replace CD to be considered mass market adopted. Digital album sales are only 1/3rd of CD's and they're substantially considered mass market.
With more and more people getting into surround sound, discovering about fidelity through online forums, HDMI-age, 24/192 DAC's in players for under $99, it's very easy to see why the labels may give Blu-ray a shot for music releases as the potential for a sustainable market has all the right facets in place. With all the surround mixes including quad mixes already done there is no shortage of catalogue titles to choose from in the initial push. Add in The Beatles on Blu-ray and finally releasing the 5.1 mix of Thriller and they could be off to a great start. Vinyl albums only sell around 13,000 copies a year for the bigger artists (Pearl Jam, etc.) and the fact they can sell that many copies alone keeps them pressing wax. Last edited by dobyblue; 05-26-2011 at 08:49 PM. |
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