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Blu-ray backers highlight rising demand

by Parm Mann on 5 December 2008, 12:48

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Tony Smith of The Register reports:

The Blu-ray Disc Alliance (BDA) has pooh-pooh'd claims that demand for the format is slowing under the recessionary pressures. It even forecast "Blu-ray will enter the mainstream" in Q1 2009.

Still, it's circumspect about releasing real numbers. The best it offered this week was the news that Brits bought 462,500 BDs in November, up 165 per cent from the 280,300 purchased in October and 251 per cent on July's 184,263 disc sales total.

Quoting market watcher GfK, the BDA said BD player sales are up 425 per cent between April and October, though it neglected to say how many units sold. A 425 per cent increase sounds good, but not if you only sold a handful of machines in the first place.

Incidentally, the numbers almost certainly don't include PlayStation 3 shipments, which would dwarf those of standalone players and thus mask such a large April-October increase.

The increase was the highest in Europe, the BDA said, quoting GfK, putting growth in UK BD player sales ahead of Germany (242 per cent), the Netherlands (197 per cent) and Italy (165 per cent).

These numbers, the organisation claimed, "contradict rumours of shortages of Blu-ray players in Europe and [of] diminishing consumer interest in the new home entertainment platform in the face of the economic downturn".

Maybe, but it's worth noting that these figures apply to a period before consumers really started to worry about the state of the economy. Conversely, they come before the inevitable big increase pre-Christmas sales activity, possibly to be boosted by the VAT reduction and plunging interest rates.

"We see the upwards sales trend increasing into the New Year and beyond," said BDA Europe boss Frank Simonis. "Blu-ray will enter the mainstream this quarter.”

Last month, market watcher Screen Digest said the recession would steer mainstream consumers away from BD player purchases, while early adopters, who are keen on buying into the format, will be hindered by shortages of cheaper machines.



HEXUS Forums :: 6 Comments

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I'll give you a couple of reasons why BluRay sales are starting to ramp up

http://www.dvd.co.uk/landingpage_690.htm

http://hmv.com/hmvweb/navigate.do?pPageID=4012&WT.ac=tcg_home_311008_blurayoffers

Simple. The prices are starting to come down.

You can also order them from about $9.99 from the US, but with shipping and the weak Sterling exchange rate it isn't as good a deal as it was 6 months ago when I was importing HD-DVDs.
To me it sounds like more of the same ‘boom’ talk i.e. “things are great!”. Think back to Enron as well. I think organisations have gotso used to hyperinflating everything because they had to compete that even now everything must have a positive spin put on it.

If you consider the UK disc sales, the revenue they must have made from that is really not that great. Maybe at £30 a disc in November the entire market made £13m. In 2008 that's not going to cover the bills let alone be making lots of money.

I wonder how many houses are blu-ray ready with a player/PS3 and a HD ready tv. I'll go out on a limb and guess 1 in a 100.
Now that BD+ has been broken, I'm more interested in the technology.

Once there's a nice fuse based mechanism for accessing encrypted discs in Linux, I'll be adopting.

Until then, they can eat my shorts.
The thing that still nigles at me abiout the HD formats is the lack of an open system for the menu and interactive content. This means that apps like MediaPortal can't use the disks natively and have to rely on external helper applications. Now, Ulead could make the PowerDVD codecs and libraries available as DirectShow filters, even the navigation components, but no, that would be far to easy for the consumer (it might be the licensing that is preventing them, so they do escape some of my annoyance).
Steve
Now that BD+ has been broken, I'm more interested in the technology.

Once there's a nice fuse based mechanism for accessing encrypted discs in Linux, I'll be adopting.

Until then, they can eat my shorts.

:rockon2: That pretty much echo's what I was thinking too - can't see much point in a film coaster that only plays on one player in the house. Which, in turns, means I've gotta wait for Eastenders to finish before I can see Hard Boiled, Iron Man, etc. :surprised:

Plus for me it's pretty academic because the only HD-capable h/w I've got is the computer stuff, not the TV.

If there is a huge upswing in folks buying BR then they're doing it online, because I've yet to see anyone heading to the cash desk with a BR disk in their mitts.

Is this perhaps the BR folks trying to ‘talk up’ their format so we'll all race out and buy it for Christmas - or am I just being very cynical? ;)