Reuters News article on Yahoo News today -
Some interesting facts contained in the article:
- 1.5 million households with BD players, 300,000 with HD DVD; both stats include game consoles & standalone players. A 5 to 1 advantage for Blu-ray. Makes that 3 to 2 advantage for BD in disc sales (Since Inception) sound not quite so overwhelming after all. Maybe Paramount did know what they were talking about when they said HD DVD had the greatest growth potential.
- Eight of the 15 top-grossing films of this year will be on HD DVD this holiday season (although not all exclusively). So much for that "overwhelming studio support" always touted by the BD side.
BTW, If you're not familiar with the stature of Adams Media Research -
Mon Sep 3, 9:59 AM ET
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood studios are becoming deeply divided over which high-definition technology will replace the DVD, increasing prospects that it will be years before next-generation players become standard equipment in U.S. households.
Paramount Pictures and DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc signed exclusivity deals to distribute their next-generation discs on Toshiba Corp's HD DVD format for the next 18 months, a move that evened a contest where Sony Corp's Blu-Ray Disc appeared to be pulling ahead.
Paramount expected the lower-priced HD DVD players, which start at $299 compared with $499 for Blu-Ray, to tempt consumers more this holiday season when summer box office blockbusters are released on high-definition DVD. "We are in a very nascent stage in the world of high definition packaged media," said Kelley Avery, president of Paramount Home Entertainment. "Our approach is taking a look at what will motivate the consumer." {snip}
Pali Research analyst Rich Greenfield said Paramount's defection from Blu-Ray "alter(s) the landscape meaningfully, as Paramount is the leading theatrical distributor year-to-date."
Eight of the 15 top-grossing films of the year, including "Shrek the Third," "Transformers" and "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" were released by studios that distribute exclusively on HD DVD or on both formats. {snip}
Tom Adams, president of Adams Media Research, said the 18-month period of exclusivity for HD DVDs at the two studios comes during slow but growing sales for the new technology and will have little impact on consumers.
"It was going to be a more sedate transition in our view anyway," Adams said. "That's one reason that a period of exclusivity didn't sound too terrifying to the studios."
Preliminary estimates compiled by Adams Media Research show that about 1.5 million U.S. households can play Blu-Ray discs on Sony PlayStations 3 video game machines or dedicated players, versus about 300,000 households whose Microsoft XBoxes or dedicated players are HD DVD compatible.
Sony has dominated high-definition software sales as well, selling twice as many discs as HD DVD in the United States.
The two formats are nearly at parity in the number of titles each has released -- about 200, according to Digital Entertainment Group data.
Despite Sony's early edge, Adams and others warn it is simply too early to tell which format will prevail.
Adams expects HD DVD to be ahead in 2008, in terms of dedicated players, capturing about 1.1 million U.S. households, compared with 900,000 households with dedicated Blu-Ray players. {snip}
In the long wait for a winner, studios that chose one format could find they're leaving money on the table, Adams said.
"The more positive development for the industry ... would have been having the Blu-Ray-exclusive studios start releasing on HD DVD," Adams said. "We think ... there's some inevitability that they will have to release in both formats."
Some interesting facts contained in the article:
- 1.5 million households with BD players, 300,000 with HD DVD; both stats include game consoles & standalone players. A 5 to 1 advantage for Blu-ray. Makes that 3 to 2 advantage for BD in disc sales (Since Inception) sound not quite so overwhelming after all. Maybe Paramount did know what they were talking about when they said HD DVD had the greatest growth potential.
- Eight of the 15 top-grossing films of this year will be on HD DVD this holiday season (although not all exclusively). So much for that "overwhelming studio support" always touted by the BD side.
BTW, If you're not familiar with the stature of Adams Media Research -
Adams Media Research is the media industry's key source of market data and financial analysis on the filmed entertainment and digital media markets. When the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Barron's, or Forbes need a realistic, no-hype view of developments in new media technologies, they call AMR.
AMR was founded by Tom Adams in 1993 to research the impact of digital technologies on entertainment media. Among the subscribers to AMR's newsletter are the senior executives at the top companies in the fields of filmed entertainment, consumer electronics, personal computers, the Internet, microprocessors, packaged media distribution, cable and telecommunications. AMR's exclusive data, models and projections are also relied on by analysts at the top financial and investment firms.