article imageHD-DVD and Blu-Ray Will Drown in Obscurity until March 2009, Study Predicts

By David Silverberg.
Subscribe to author
Sep 26, 2007 by  David Silverberg - 9 votes, 3 comments
Share
Listen - Email - Print
Recipient email:
You can enter up to 10 comma-separated email addresses.
Your email:
optional
Message:
optional

Just like another war overseas that never seems to end, the high-def format conflict will continue to rage until March 2009 when a winner is crowned, a new study predicts. Blu-ray and HD-DVD simply aren’t turning on consumers today.
Digital Journal — Studying the disc format war between Blu-ray (backed by Sony) and HD-DVD (backed by Toshiba), Forrester said in a recent report that it will take another 18 months until sales of next-generation DVD players soar to success.
Few people are attracted to the high-def devices, despite the two camps “fighting what seems to be a war of attrition for consumers’ hearts and minds,” Reuters reported.
In the Forrester report attained by Digital Journal (see below), analyst J.P. Gownder explained how Blu-ray failed to land a knock-out punch in the competitive conflict, partially because of PlayStation 3’s unimpressive launch. And Blu-ray failed to lure to its camp Paramount and Dreamworks, two mega-studios that instead joined the HD-DVD format.
But the bigger problem is consumer awareness. Gownder wrote:
More than half of all US households haven’t heard of either next-generation format…Less than a fifth of HDTV-owning households report having seen a next-generation player. Consumer awareness, exposure, and ownership remain stunted.
Gownder’s research and consumer surveys revealed more telling news about HDTV lovers. He found that only one-third of HDTV owners are willing to make a format choice today, with 26 per cent of respondents saying they would only buy a next-gen DVD player if it played both Blu-ray and HD-DVD titles. That means dual players could find more traction in this heated race and help revive the slowing $24 billion home DVD market.
Gownder offered recommendations to makers of these dual-format players:
LG Electronics’ Super Blu, exceptionally overpriced at $1,299, needs to drop significantly. Samsung’s autumn release must come in below $500 to capture the market’s attention. By the end of 2007, these players should retail for $400 or less to capture share.
Forrester still predicts Blu-ray will win the format war, but only if it does several things to help its own cause. Gownder wrote that Blu-ray needs to slash hardware prices so players will retail for $250 or less by Christmas 2007. He also warns that more studios joining the HD-DVD side could cripple Blu-ray’s victory chances:
Blu-ray’s advantage in content remains critical, but a defection from another studio would throw the entire competition into a price gain — which Blu-ray isn’t poised to win at the moment.
Before this report hit the headlines, the Blu-ray camp was optimistic their future was as sunny as the California coast. According to BBC News, Sony estimated shipments of Blu-ray players could increase sixfold this year to 600,000. Meanwhile, Toshiba took a more practical view, cutting their sales target for HD-DVD devices this year from 1.8 million to 1 million.
Nevertheless, the high-def format war will remain deadlocked until consumers vote with their dollars. There isn’t enough incentive to replace your standard DVD library with a high-def disc that could cost $25 and end up being the Beta of the format war. As a Macleans writer pointed out:
There's not much to attract buyers either way: only a select few movies are available in either format, and few TV shows have been released in high-def (Prison Break will be Fox's first Blu-Ray TV release). In practice, most people are still buying regular DVDs while the studios fight it out over two unloved high-def formats.
Will early adopters be the true suckers in this battle? It looks that way, especially with high prices still making most consumers uneasy, and a catalogue of titles that is paltry at best. Blockbuster’s move to stock Blu-ray titles might help sway the undecided home-theatre nut, but there has to be an overload of support to one camp in order for a champion to be definitively crowned.
And if Forrester Research is right, in 18 months that victor will indeed be winning the lion’s share of the high-def format market. For movie studios and curious consumers, March 2009 couldn’t come quick enough.
pdf The Next_Gen DVD Format Ware_Still Bloody
article:233023:9::0

Live like a rodent at the French 'hamster hotel'

If you've ever had the urge to spend a night or two as a hamster, you need to visit Nantes, France. For around $150 a night, you can do everything a hamster does, from spinning on a wheel to eating the animal's food to sleeping on a pile of hay.
Nov 21, 2009 by  David Silverberg in Travel - 2 comments

Easyjet apologizes for Holocaust Memorial photo shoot

Easyjet is a European regional carrier that has quickly carved out market share with discount prices and targeted marketing. However, a recent public relations faux pas is causing controversy.
Nov 21, 2009 by  Bob Gordon in Travel - 6 comments

Chicago Mayor Says Media 'Kicked' Oprah Out of Town

Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley weighed in on the story that every Chicagoan has an opinion about, Oprah's departure happening eighteen months from now. Yesterday, Mayor Daley placed the burden of shame on the fifth estate.
Nov 21, 2009 by  Bob Gordon in Entertainment - 4 comments

TopFinds: Child Poverty in U.S., Creating Toothpick Cities

Investigating U.S. child poverty rates. A British TV station hires facially disfigured anchors to read the news. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 becomes the hottest video game of the year. These are the top stories making headlines around the world.
Nov 20, 2009 by  David Silverberg in Internet - 2 comments

Canada: No more H1N1 deaths than from seasonal flu

While headlines decry the rising H1N1 death toll, news is emerging that there have been no more deaths from this pandemic than from seasonal flu.
Nov 20, 2009 by  Lynne Melcombe in Health - 8 comments
apis-129892 apis-129889 apis-129886 apis-129867 apis-129865
Email:
Password:
Remember meForgot password?