It wasnt me but come to think about it, 1% of the market is virtually dissappearing.I see Vurbano already put his vote in :haha
It wasnt me but come to think about it, 1% of the market is virtually dissappearing.I see Vurbano already put his vote in :haha
I dont think it will happen in 4 years (2012). If it happens, If HD becomes widely adopted by the consumer then maybe it will pass DVD in 10 years IF another format doesnt kill it off. Most people are not going to wheel out their 36" SOny trinitrons to the curb, they are going to wait until the set fails. And even today there are HUGE percentages of people who have HD sets and NO HD programming subscriptions. A lot of IF's have to come true for your dream to materialize. You do realize that BD sold .3% of the disc market in 2007??? 5.6 million compared to 1700 million for DVD. And you are predicting 50% in 4 years? I am not being negative towards BD with this post, only realistic in the hurdles that any HD format will have. My gosh look how many years it took to finally set a firm date for the digital transition? What what the first date? And how many times did it change? And still that has nothing to do with HD only digital.We may have seriously underestimated the growth for 2008 - and thereafter. See the article quoted in this thread.
Maybe sometime between 2012 & 2015 we'll see Blu-ray sales exceed DVD sales.
Wow, a decent post for vurb (in this thread anyway)I dont think it will happen in 4 years (2012). If it happens, If HD becomes widely adopted by the consumer then maybe it will pass DVD in 10 years IF another format doesnt kill it off. Most people are not going to wheel out their 36" SOny trinitrons to the curb, they are going to wait until the set fails. And even today there are HUGE percentages of people who have HD sets and NO HD programming subscriptions. A lot of IF's have to come true for your dream to materialize. You do realize that BD sold .3% of the disc market in 2007??? 5.6 million compared to 1700 million for DVD. And you are predicting 50% in 4 years? I am not being negative towards BD with this post, only realistic in the hurdles that any HD format will have. My gosh look how many years it took to finally set a firm date for the digital transition? What what the first date? And how many times did it change? And still that has nothing to do with HD only digital.
why make high bitrate DVD like superbit anyway, The vast majority of consumers arent interested in it. DVD sales numbers proves it.Why make a double layer high bit rate DVD with a ton of special features when BD is there.
Can I have some of whatever you are smoking?Why do people think consumers have a choice in this matter?
why make high bitrate DVD like superbit anyway, The vast majority of consumers arent interested in it. DVD sales numbers proves it.
Can I have some of whatever you are smoking?
I think this is the worst strategy BDA can employ.A new business model will emerge.
Big movies will go to BD for $30-40 for a while, perhaps 6 months or longer before they move to the bargain DVD for $20-25...
DVD quality will be cut... Consumers will be driven to BD...
I think this is the worst strategy BDA can employ.
That makes the likelihood of them at least try it quite high.
And it might succeed...
Right after the world peace problem is solved and hell freezes over...
Diogen.
According to the 2007 data, the ASP (average selling price) of a hidef disk was $30.BDA has nothing to do with it now... It is up to the studios now...
It's not the profit margin per-se, but profit times the number of sales that matters......I would be looking at ways to get the consumers moved to a higher profit item ASAP.
Because they have tried this with DVD-A/SACD and everybody knows how that turned up......why not milk the "rich" HD owner first then give to the masses.
I dont think it will happen in 4 years (2012). If it happens, If HD becomes widely adopted by the consumer then maybe it will pass DVD in 10 years IF another format doesnt kill it off. Most people are not going to wheel out their 36" SOny trinitrons to the curb, they are going to wait until the set fails. And even today there are HUGE percentages of people who have HD sets and NO HD programming subscriptions. A lot of IF's have to come true for your dream to materialize. You do realize that BD sold .3% of the disc market in 2007??? 5.6 million compared to 1700 million for DVD. And you are predicting 50% in 4 years? I am not being negative towards BD with this post, only realistic in the hurdles that any HD format will have. My gosh look how many years it took to finally set a firm date for the digital transition? What what the first date? And how many times did it change? And still that has nothing to do with HD only digital.
All these naysayers. You were blind about HD DVD, and so wrong. Why do you think you could possibly be right about the failure of Blu-ray? Your track record for predictions is poor. Don't confuse what you might LIKE to see with what we are likely to see.
Who said you should?Why should we listen to people that were so convinced that HD-DVD would win?
...why should we start listening now?
WOW! Thoughts... Mind......the same thoughts have crossed my mind many times.
But hey, no reason to "start listening now", remember...?
No, I am referring to your own nonsense here:OH, I don't know about 4 years. You're referring to the article.
Maybe sometime between 2012 & 2015 we'll see Blu-ray sales exceed DVD sales.
Thats nice but the consumer decided the war. You can argue that BOGO's supported by the companies helped but in the DVD war the numbers of DVD users are so massive that BDA simply does not have the cash to support that kind of effort. And quite frankly its laughable to even suggest that there is a DVD vs BD war right now. Its like saying that Tibet may overtake China.What were HD-DVD people smoking thinking they would have a choice in the matter? Profit drives all, and studios want more of it and they see it in BD.
I do not recall making predictions of victory for either format. What I do recall are stating the facts that HD DVD was the more efficient, mature and consumer friendly format. That fact has never changed. Even today BD still has not caught up with cheap full featured Profile 2.0 players. The BD hardware raping continues. Every HD DVD standalone player met all specs. I also never made any statement on par with the stupidity I see here suggesting the demise of DVD in a few years.All these naysayers. You were blind about HD DVD, and so wrong. Why do you think you could possibly be right about the failure of Blu-ray? Your track record for predictions is poor. Don't confuse what you might LIKE to see with what we are likely to see.
Why should we listen to people that were so convinced that HD-DVD would win? To put it more bluntly, you haven't been correct yet, why should we start listening now?
What track record we all looked at the facts and made our decision. I still and will always stand by the fact that every HD DVD stand alone was made to complete specs and was better for the consumer, but as we now see it was more about backroom wheeling and dealing then what was best for the consumer. So again how stupid is it for you and db2 to question someone’s track record? I guess your track record is great because: 1. WB actually selected HD DVD but couldn’t get another studio to come over with them 2. Sony had the deep pockets to influence behind the scenes? Whose dreaming now? You been doing a lot of dreaming lately.Your track record for predictions is poor.