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#1 |
Active Member
Jan 2008
New Mexico
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http://www.afterdawn.com/news/archive/14979.cfm
It all depends on how fast Blu movies/players go down in price. IMO |
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#2 | ||
Special Member
Oct 2007
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#3 |
Power Member
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Y'know, I see endless numbers of complaints about the expense of movies on Blu-ray and I just have to say a lot of those complaints are way off base.
Frankly, a lot of those complaints are ignorant of the history of the DVD format and its MSRP pricing. In the first 3 years of the DVD format, most movies cost well over $20. Some even cost over $30. I paid nearly $40 for my Criterion Collection edition of Robocop. New DVD releases still carry a hefty MSRP and even with the price discounted most new DVDs still cost $19 to $23 on average. The folks who believe new DVD releases typically cost $15 or $10 really need to get their facts straight. Another factor is also being flatly ignored in the price complaints: the current, low value of the U.S. Dollar. Right now $1 is worth a lot less than its value in the late 1990s. A Blu-ray carrying a $25 or $30 price tag now is really no different than a DVD that cost $20 a few years ago. With all of that stated, I don't think disc pricing is going to be a big factor in preventing Blu-ray from growing more and more popular. HD-quality video is the future. DVD is doomed with technology of yesterday. The February 2009 switch to all DTV broadcasting will force a lot of people to upgrade their TV sets -especially with the low cost set top converter boxes not working very well. More than 30 million HDTV sets have already been sold. Millions more will be sold this fall in advance of the impending DTV switch. Once someone upgrades their television to HDTV they usually don't want to go back to any SD stuff. People really pay more attention to image quality once they see the difference between HD and SD quality material. Old 480p video on DVD will seem very antiquated all of a sudden. Though it may seem hard to believe that Blu-ray movies could be outselling DVD by 2011 (especially when BD is making up less than 10% of movie disc sales currently), I think 2011 could actually be a conservative estimate. Who knows for sure what could be happening 3 years from now? |
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#4 | ||
Special Member
Oct 2007
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Global sales though I would doubt. And if a Sony exec is going to make projections, then an absolute must is to present credible current data. See source article here: http://www.digitimes.com/systems/a20080801PD200.html Quote:
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#7 |
Banned
May 2007
Brussels, Belgium
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2011 they say ? it's possible but not certain. Seems a bit rash to state such a bold prediction. But it would be nice if it came true
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#8 |
Active Member
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Im Hoping this article is the case. I work with a guy who is trying to brainwash not only our co-workers, but the Custom A/V customers as well. I heard him telling a customer that Bluray would lose out rather quickly to download technologies. He even went as far as to betting me that Blu-ray would be extinct by 2010...LOL...I took the bet laughing!
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#10 | |
Power Member
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Blu-ray sales are definitely going to trend upward in the United States, Canada, Western Europe and Japan. The 2011 mark for BD sales to overtake DVD sales seems reasonable in those areas. Other parts of the world may lag behind, but they already make up only a small portion of current home video sales. |
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#11 | |
Banned
Jan 2008
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https://www.dtv2009.gov/ Whats your point about the low cost convert box's. People who have them really don't care about HD quality video. If they do, they can get a better quality converter box. BTW, DVD isn't quite dead yet.. John Last edited by aviman33; 08-03-2008 at 01:53 AM. |
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#12 |
Power Member
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Actually, I am far from wrong. 100% correct is more like it.
First, my point about the DTV converter boxes is they're crap. Low cost and low build quality. Quite a few people in my area of Oklahoma have already obtained the $40 government coupons and bought DTV converter boxes. Our local ABC affiliate ran a news story this past week about those some of those boxes failing to work after only a couple of months worth of use. Regarding cable and satellite providers, they will not support SD channels indefinitely. Cable and satellite service providers can discontinue certain kinds of services and force users to switch out different receivers or cable boxes as their technology demands change. Dish Network and DirecTV are both in an arms race of sorts trying to one-up each other over the amount of HDTV programming they provide. Verizon and others feel the pressure to respond to growing demands for more HDTV channels. All of those service providers have only a finite amount of bandwidth to accommodate TV channels. On Friday, Dish Network "unplugged" any customer still using a MPEG-2 HD-capable receiver. It was mandatory for any HD customer of Dish Network to upgrade to a MPEG-4 based receiver. The upgrade wasn't automatically free either. Dish Network added 17 more HD channels on Friday, most of them premium channels (such as 8 HBO channels in HD). DirecTV is due to add more HD channels in mid-August. At some point, the customer base for SD programming on satellite and cable services is going to become too small to continue providing service. The service providers will eventually use that cable or satellite bandwidth for HD use. |
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#13 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#14 | |
Member
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Allan |
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#16 | |
Banned
Jan 2008
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The cable companies love SD. They have limited bandwidth and SD allows them to fit many channels into that bandwidth. HD is a pain the cable companies ass. That's why the cable company lobby inserted a loop hole into the law with respect to DTV. SD converted to a digital transmission to your cable box is considered DTV. So they are broadcasting the same old SD crap with a handful of HD Lite broadcast. You obviously don't understand what your talking about. The government box program is to help low income people, cheap people and people who don't give a dam about digital TV. If you want a better box, several are available, from $50 to $150.. But, they are not on the Fed's list because they will not subsidize converter box's with HDMI or component outputs. By my accounting, your 100% wrong. |
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#18 |
Banned
Jan 2008
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#19 |
Banned
Jan 2008
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Another factor holding BD back is convenience. BD is massively inconvenient. For instance you buy your kids a Disney movie on BD. More than likely they can't play it at their friends house, since they probably don't have a bd player. They can't play it in the mini van's DVD player and they can't play it on their portable DVD player for the car. Also they can probably only play it in one location in the house.
Prices need to come way down so multiple unit can become feasible. |
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#20 |
Senior Member
Sep 2007
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I think we will see a few weeks in 2010 with BD selling more than DVD, BD players will sell more in 2010 than DVD players as BD players will be around $100 and companies will no longer make DVD players unless they are the $30 ones.
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