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#542 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I’m told there was a glitch in last year’s numbers that wasn’t discovered until well after the reports were sent out, and they never bothered with corrected figures. So this year’s numbers are correct and you can replace last year’s numbers with whatever the reverse calculation is. Thanks. ---------------------------------- John Latchem Managing Editor/ Reviews Editor/ Market Research Director HOME MEDIA MAGAZINE |
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Thanks given by: | bruceames (03-21-2017) |
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#545 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#546 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Y-axis is in billions
X-axis: 1 = year 2006 and 11 = year 2016 Sorry, tried to format the x-axis values and gave up after 30 minutes. ![]() Chart 1 shows the decline of DVD very clearly, peaking at nearly $14 billion in 2006, to just $3.43 billion last year. Notice the linear nature of the decline. The first linear decline is fairly small, from 2006-2008 (average decline of 5% a year). The second is much steeper, from 2008-2011 (down 15% per year), and the latest decline "curve" (2011-2016) is also nearly a straight line, a more moderate decline of about 10% a year. The growth curve of Blu-ray can be seen in the secord chart, and lately has remain fairly constant, around $2 billion a year for the last 7 years. The digital figures (growth curve shown in chart 3) are sell-through only and I don't have the data for years prior to 2008 (although it's insignificant anyway). But digital growth started out slow and started to grow quickly in 2012. This rapid growth lasted until 2015, and last year growth has slowed down again. Below is the table of data from which the charts are derived. Keep in mind that Digital HD doesn't separate HD from SD purchases. So for comparison's sake, between digital and disc, one would need to compare the sum of DVD and Blu-ray against it. Nevertheless, they are 3 separate categories for tracking sell-through spending, and the only ones we have right now. Code:
Year DVD BD Digital 2006 13.89 0.02 0 2007 13.38 0.25 0 2008 12.48 0.63 0 2009 10.55 1.07 0.43 2010 8.5 1.8 0.54 2011 6.8 2.1 0.6 2012 6 2.18 0.81 2013 5.33 2.33 1.19 2014 4.66 2.12 1.55 2015 3.96 2.02 1.89 2016 3.43 2.02 2 Chart 2: Blu-ray growth curve Chart 3: Digital growth curve Last edited by bruceames; 03-25-2017 at 03:55 PM. |
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#547 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I'll update my revenue table next week, but the last two weeks have really helped Blu-ray get out of a deep hole. It was down over 22 percent but now it's only down 7 percent and there are some good weeks coming up. The interesting week will be Rogue One week, which is the same week as the previous Star Wars movie last year. That week did $93 million.
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (03-26-2017) |
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#548 | |
Junior Member
Mar 2017
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Granted, the movies aren't true 4K, but there is a lot to be said for being able to use existing drives and allready-bought discs(not to mention a lot of discs are going for $5 or $10 now, or even less on the used market). That could, in turn, feed into standard Blu-Ray making a surge, simply because of the mismanagement of 4K content. When HDR is a matter of 'buy another 4K TV', I don't think you'll find a lot of people are willing, so they'll use whatever provides the best picture, which is regular Blu-ray. As long as its 'good enough', they'll simply wait out the process buying older discs. |
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#549 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#550 | |
Junior Member
Mar 2017
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But step back and look for a second. We're now *3 years* into 4K and have maybe one or two UHD players at premium pricing, with declarations that all the old TV's should be scrapped in favor of new HDR UHD TV's, or that the older 4K sets won't work with streaming. Its a classic case of the tech industry not getting their ducks in a row. People have been buying the TV's... its just the content has been lagging, or now has technical conflicts. The PC side is a mess of declarations of new hardware due to copyright shenanigans, which is largely a byproduct of the industry simply just not caring whether the new discs can be played on PCs, regardless of if those same PC's already have had the technical capability, and for quite a while I might add. If you want to sell UHD discs, they need to work on as many current systems as possible that have the capability of playing them, not as few as humanly possible. Will the problem fix itself? Sure, but it'll take years for the customer buying cycle to roll over, and in all likelihood they'd only upgrade for 8K. People don't tend to like buying twice within the same resolution of TV. 3D exhibited this issue, HDR will be no different. Gimmicks to enhance the picture simply don't have the TV buying power of a completely different resolution paradigm, and people only tend to buy that once given the cost. As such, I have a feeling that as people wise-up, they'll finally push regular Blu-Ray into the mainstream as the de facto standard, finally replacing DVD, for a decade or more. If they get 4K discs, it'll simply be because they are riding along in the same package at the sell-through price point. I'm sure your niche enthusiasts will put out for any tech to make sure they're riding the bleeding edge, but thats a fraction of the money that could have actually been made. And as stated, in all reality the TV industry starts rolling 8K in a couple years and shuffling the deck yet again. Basically.. its such a mess that regular Blu-Ray may win by default as you can get 95% of the benefits and the existing equipment is very inexpensive. Last edited by chrisbluray; 03-26-2017 at 12:15 AM. |
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#551 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#552 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#553 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Wow Chris, you reading waay too much into this. UHD BD has only been out a year, not three, and there is no reason to believe it's not doing well. Show me these "declarations" that old TVs should be scrapped for HDR TVs. That's pure hyperbole, come on.
Sure, if they want to enjoy the new format in HDR, then they will have to get an HDR TV. But again, that was the case with Blu-ray too. They had to get an HDTV, and even then 1080P TVs were very expensive until about 3-4 years after launch. And of course the players. Remember the $1000 Blu-ray players? Now we have: Sony Player: $300 Samsung: $200 Xbox One S: $300 (also gaming) Panasonic: $700 (I think, not sure) Oppo: $550 That's at least 5 players out now, only two of which are "premium" pricing (if you think $300 is premium pricing only one year after launch, then perhaps you need to look at the pricing of players in other formats during the same period after launch. They were much higher). Not one or two players like you said. Who cares about the PC side? Video formats have never been PC-based, and sales from PC setups have always been small. HDR is not a gimmick. If you see it, you will not think so. It really sounds like you are bothered that this format is getting "in the way" and trying to make regular Blu-ray obsolete. But actually UHD BD is just a supplement to regular Blu-ray, so you have nothing to worry about. They are both on the same "team". ![]() |
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#554 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#555 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#558 | ||||||
Junior Member
Mar 2017
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Last time it was 3D, this time its HDR. I'm not dismissing the improvements, they're certainly tangible(I've been a fan of 3D), i'm saying that they don't get people out to the store. Rather than better resolution, we make your picture look better and different in some way that we believe will get people to buy a new TV. Will HDR even have staying power once 8K hits, or have the shelf life of say 3D? That's rhetorical, I know your opinion on it, only time will tell if it actually does. Quote:
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For me, 3D TV wasn't a gimmick either and I still love the picture on a good set. We saw how long that lasted. Quote:
You're trying to hit a moving target with content, for which for most people regular Blu-Ray is 'good enough'. I wouldn't be surprised if companies look to resolve this in the near future by mastering at 8, downconverting and selling at 4, and then having the 8 ready to double-dip early in the 2020's. At which point, investing in the 4K content in the last couple years of this decade was pointless, because they were really just resetting the table for 8. It really feels like they just took too long to get rolling on it. I know you can't see it now because of The New Shiny Toy, but you probably will later. Last edited by chrisbluray; 03-26-2017 at 02:57 AM. |
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#559 | |||||||||
Blu-ray Ninja
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Most of the negativity regarding 2K upscales have been from non-owners, who tend to change their tune when they see that, in spite of it being from a 2K DI, there is still more spatial detail in the picture than on the regular Blu-ray. But that's not the point. The point is that most of the benefit of UHD is from the HDR/WCG and 10 bit depth color. The law of diminishing returns really kicks in when you go from 2K to 4K resolution. With 8K you'd have to sit ridiculously close to the screen to see any benefit from resolution increase (for example within 4 feet of a 75" display). Quote:
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As for 2K upconverts, reviews and owner impressions have shown little to no correlation between the visual upgrade between BD and UHD BD vs. whether it was sourced from a 2K or 4K DI. Quote:
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I don't get this obsession about 8K with you. 4K discs have only been out a year. Life is too short to wait for something that will probably never come to disc. I've been enjoying HDR movies for over a year, and 4K movies for nearly 3 years. It's been worth it not to wait. Life is short. |
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