Exactly two years ago HD DVD lost the battle to Blu-ray.
Around the same time I made a few posts with an estimate what Blu-ray market share would be.
Here and here.
DEG published their year-end report for 2010 that allows us to check how accurate those predictions were.
http://www.dvdinformation.com/pressreleases/2011/f_Q410.pdf
One of the assumptions made in the old posts was wrong: I assumed DVD sales will get frozen whereas they went down
The latest DEG report claims 170 million BD disks were sold in 2010, i.e. exactly 10% of that "frozen" number of DVDs...
I'm really proud of my crystal ball...
Diogen.
Around the same time I made a few posts with an estimate what Blu-ray market share would be.
Here and here.
DEG published their year-end report for 2010 that allows us to check how accurate those predictions were.
http://www.dvdinformation.com/pressreleases/2011/f_Q410.pdf
One of the assumptions made in the old posts was wrong: I assumed DVD sales will get frozen whereas they went down
If they did freeze, the same number of DVDs were sold today, i.e. 1700 million (see above)....the total number of DVDs shipped is 1700 million as opposed to 5.6 million BDs. That makes it 0.33%.
Adding HDs will increase this number 50% (i.e. 2:1 sales ration), hence 0.5%.
Assuming DVD sales get frozen, this BD percent goes up 7 times next year (40/5.6), i.e. about 2.5%.
After that, according to predictions, it will follow the DVD acceptance curve, i.e. about double every year.
DVD Entertainment Group
That would mean it will take two more years (doubling twice) to bring this BD to DVD disc sales ratio to 10%.
To summarize, by the end of 2010 the BD market will be 10% of DVDs. Smashing success...
The latest DEG report claims 170 million BD disks were sold in 2010, i.e. exactly 10% of that "frozen" number of DVDs...
I'm really proud of my crystal ball...
Diogen.