... HD DVD came out swinging with nearly flawless execution and outstanding quality, while Sony's first BD releases & Samsung's BD player were . . . well, less than impressive, at best.
Ain't it the truth!
It's always been an uphill battle for HD DVD. BUT, BD has hit a couple of snags in its long held strategy.
1- The PS3 is hardly a smashing success. It has dropped to 3rd place in game console sales in North America, and the recent Europe was hardly stellar. The loss in Sony's game division nearly wipe all the profits company wide in the last quarter. How long will Sony shareholders tolerate a huge hardware profit loss with little chance to recoup those losses with future software sales for an "also ran, 3rd place" game console?
It's early in it's product life, and doesn't even have the best games out on it yet. From what I read, not too different from the first few months of the Xbox 360 launch. But you can't make toast on a PS3. Give it a year, or at least until Xmas.
2- The recent BDA announcement that BD players do not have to meet full BD-java interactivity for another 7 months. That's hardly an incentive to go out and buy any BD player - including the PS3 - until manufacturers certify their hardware meets that standard.
Oh yes- a biggie for me - & I don't even care about PIP. I view this as a disincentive to buy. I doubt I'll be shopping around the Fourth of July as I previously planned. Unless manufacturers beat that deadline by a mile.
3- HD DVD continues to enjoy a strong movie release schedule, with more HD DVD releases scheduled through the end of June than on BD. The Matrix HD DVD Collection to be released May 22 is already #52 in Amazon sales
Perhaps a bit optimistic, but we'll see. Especially with Spielberg out, it would be really hard for Universal to out trump the exclusive Blu-ray studios. We'll see how the fight goes. If we hit the end of the summer and Blu-ray is still only outselling by 2 or 3 to 1, it'll be a whole different ball game.
It always has been and will continue to be an uphill battle for HD DVD. But it's a strong enough contender that it ain't going away anytime soon. I predict HD DVD movie sales will catch back up to BD sales in the next few months, and both will still be strong contenders Christmas '07.
Possible. Not likely- at least, I don't see how. But we've all been surprised in the past.
And what's wrong with both formats surviving?
Costly to studios and retailers.
I don't think it's causing "consumer confusion" and reluctance for the average consumer to adopt either format. I think it's the dang high prices of players that's causing consumers to hold back embracing either format. The friends & family who have viewed my HD DVD setup overwhelmingly say it's "nice", but not $500 nice. When I tell them the competition costs $1,000 & up, the most used comment is "That's just plan crazy!
Now, you know you can get a Blu-ray player for about the same price as an HD-DVD player.