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#22 | |
Senior Member
Jun 2008
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You can keep your simple math that is what you understand, things like profit & Loss, Capitalization, ROI may be beyond your abilities. The question was this; Within 2-3 years Total Blu-rays sales will not even come close to outselling Total DVD's with exceptions made possibly for a small percentage of entertainment films. Part of this is that a great many popular film DVDs will never be produced on Blu-ray. Why, for a number reasons, but I'll stick with financial ones for this post. There are huge amounts of DVD producing capacity filling a need of the market. Yet, you say within 2-3 years all these companies will junk the equipment and purchase new Blu-ray technology to replace it. Where are the funds coming from to follow this course of action? One, which will result in the loss of the valuable DVD revenue stream (Good luck getting any CFO to sign off on this). And this is just for entertainment. What about the enormous volume of Government & Corporate DVDs that are made each year (training fillms, Power Point presentaions etc...). Ones that would not benefit from the increased cost of Blu-ray (either in equipment or the discs themselves). Given the global economic situation this alone will keep DVD technology around for 10+ years just for them. Point: If you think all US companies and governments are just going destroy valauble on-the-book assets and invest in new technology without a clear benefit to the public, then yes, you must be living in an alternate universe. In closing: I have just dealt with the United States, there is the rest of the world to account for also. If you care about the OPs question? |
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#24 | ||||||||
Blu-ray Knight
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Quite frankly, that sad argument is getting old. If anything can be said, it is that just about any film is likely to come out on Blu-ray. Just like DVD. Quote:
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Government & Corporate DVDs... ![]() ![]() |
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#25 | |
Senior Member
Feb 2008
SoCal
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And to try and stay on subject here, I think abou 10 years is the best estimate. A couple factors I think that come into play here... 1) When DVD came on scene you could see a quality difference without buyinga new TV. For Blu ray to be effective the industry is asking people to not simply buy a new player and a new media, but they also need to buy a new TV in many cases to get the benefit. This will slow the adoption of blu-ray fora large part of the poplulation. 2) When DVD came on scene the home viewing movie industry basically stayed exactly the same, simply changing media type. In other words, people still went to Blockbuster, rented thier movie, watched it in the living room and had to return it the next day. Now not only has the rental industry changed dramatically but people don't simply reant a movie and watch it in the living room. Now many people are just as happy watching it on thier computer with is not HD, so they don't care. Many people use DVDs in thier car, which is not HD, so they don't care. Many people stream or download movies, so they don't care abotu Blu-ray either. My point is that there are large parts of the population that simply don't care about Blu-ray becuause it is beyond thier needs for enjoying a movie, and for these reasons it will take longer for Blu-ray to kill DVD than it did for DVD to kill VHS. |
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#26 | ||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#27 | |||||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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If you take completely phases out as " they have been wiped off of the face of the earth and there is no traces that they ever existed" then I would have to agree with the people saying never since even 20 years from now someone (me, if I am still alive) could have some in a box some wher. But if you take it to mean " when will studios stop releasing on DVD and many places will only have BDs for sale/rent" then 2-3 years is my guess and it is extremely realistic. And if you bothered to read the actual question from the OP you would see that he said " So what is your guess in a year or two, 5 years or 10 years before it takes over the industry? " so it was #2 and not #1 that he was asking. Quote:
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#28 | ||||||
Senior Member
Jun 2008
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When 2014 comes and 5 of the top 10 films of the year are only produced on Blu-ray I will conceed that you were correct in your assumptions. Will you do the same? Quote:
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Future prediction: If we are both still alive when the next format comes along and Blu-ray has 90% of the market AND it also is backward compatible we can have this debate ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#29 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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I'll go with your comments-- sounds just about right! |
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#30 |
Senior Member
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One thing it will come to is storage space. i know hdd's are getting huge and cheap but they can still fail. I like to have all my pictures, movies and music on a physical disk. i have 9k pictures, not too many movies and about 3k songs that I have backed up on an external HDD and on disk( it would REALLY suck to lose the pictures). With picture files getting bigger and bigger, BD storage would be the way to go. My wedding pix were on 12 CD's and then I put them on 2 dvd's. Now i can put on 1 BD.
Another thing that will help is portable BD players. I know a 7-15 inch screen I will not see a difference in PQ but it will be the fact that I can watch my Blu rays on the go without having to buy the DVD version. When BD players start showing up in mini vans, that will help push blu ray even more. DVD will be here for awhile more (at least 5-7 years) but Blu ray will become more accepted as people start to buy HDTV's in the next few years. |
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#31 | |||||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#32 | |
Special Member
Oct 2007
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https://forum.blu-ray.com/3404713-post8.html So how is 2 years from now realistic for studios to stop DVD releases? I predict a longer trail off for DVD than VHS. We may see some studios exclusively going with combo packs or dual sided discs though to go with one SKU per title. Last edited by blu2; 06-20-2010 at 09:22 PM. |
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#33 |
Blu-ray Prince
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No credible home media analyst or anyone inside the studios thinks Blu-ray will completely replace DVD for all titles. What is likely to happen as the years progress are major day-and-date releases exclusively go to Blu-ray, while Internet streaming/downloads replace the lower-end titles and television shows that now only end up on DVD.
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#34 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I know people in the home-video production and distribution business (no, not porn, you wise-asses) that have no interest in doing blu-ray at all. It is a lot more expensive to produce than DVD.
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You're really missing the point, Anthony: all those blu-ray players out there are still DVD players, too. Content makers see this, and therefore continue to make DVDs. That's not a prediction, that's an observation. See, you're thinking strictly in terms of big boys like WB... while they are certainly the largest piece of the pie, they are not the whole pie. Whenever a big studio eventually ditches their DVD presses, that gear is just going to go on Ebay and get bought up and used by a small operation. Likewise, there are a lot of people who will be fine with DVD and never give it up until they really do stop making it. Unlike VHS, a lot of people do not want to give up their DVD because it still works. In contradiction to what you have said, DVD does offer something over blu-ray: price. It is cheap to make, and cheap to buy, and the world is full of cheap people, especially in a recession that is not ending anytime soon, (no matter what the government keeps telling us). That is my point: DVD will persist for a good while because it still works, the same way that CDs persist because they still work, (yeah, I know, the trend is towards MP3s, but that doesn't change the fact that CDs are still a widely used because widely supported media format). You and Rob can laugh all you want about "porn" and "backyard wrestling" as the sole survivors of DVD, but it's still true, there will be minor productions on DVD for a long time to come. Sure, DVD will fade pretty quickly into a minor consideration, but it will still hang around for the foreseeable future, it's still a perfectly functional personal-use media format, and will be for a long time. Last edited by mjbethancourt; 06-20-2010 at 10:59 PM. |
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#35 | ||
Active Member
Jul 2009
Hickory Hills, IL USA (Chicagoland)
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#36 | |||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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But, not here on this planet and this reality. Fantasy wishing aside, the current economics just do not support such a quick demise of DVDs. " concerning my guess? Quote:
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#37 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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* it was in the news that Jan 1 2006 there would be no more VHS releases, but like always there can be delays and stuff and so some did come out in 2006 |
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#38 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Tape was a terrible technology, in all its forms. Consumers were happy to ditch it as soon as replacement technologies were offered; and in music, a lot of consumers skipped tape altogether because it was so awful. The fate of one particular tape-based product (VHS) is a terrible analogy for something as well-conceived as DVD, or any other laser-optic media.
The fate of all laser-optic media is intrinsically tied together through backward/cross-compatibility, both in use and in manufacture. DVD, and blu-ray, and CD, laserdisc, and any future laser-optic media, will all die out together at some point in the future, when that technology is convincingly superseded. I would bet money that in 2020, if blu-rays are still being made, then DVDs are also still being made. |
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#39 | ||||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#40 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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In spite of all the anti-Blu-Ray "journalism", Blu-Ray is growing faster than DVD did, in all ways except for catalog titles (and thus, total revenue/revenue %). As time progresses, this will matter less and less. Thus I don't see a problem at all with the claim that DVD will die off one year faster than VHS did. It's not like he said it'll be by year's end. And I too know a lot of people who had no A/V benefit to DVD over VHS, on an RF-in connector the difference was negligible (about the same as Blu-Ray vs. DVD on a 15 inch TV). Last edited by Terjyn; 06-21-2010 at 12:44 AM. |
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