As I and other have stated that price of players is one of the main keys. Case in point, as the HD-A2 started dropping in price around $250, it quickly rose to the number 1 dvd player on amazon and more impressive, #1 is electronics all around. I'd say that's pretty good.
I think since you seem pretty biased toward Bluray, you are overlooking the significance of price. Price is arguably much more important than any other factor. PS3 can do many more things than a Wii can do, but which console sells 500,000+ systems a month and which sells 82,000 systems a month? If HD DVD can get to the sub-$200 range and Bluray is still stuck at the $500 range by this Holiday season, I would imagine HD DVD would sell a lot more regardless of "other factors".
Either way, I'm personally waiting for that dual format Samsung player to come down in price.
This will be interesting to watch as HD-DVD players which are already outselling their Blu Ray by a decent margin get cheaper and into the price range of more consumers. At what point does HD-DVD close the margins on movie shipments on a monthly basis with Blu Ray? Unless BluRay players close the gap in shipments it is only a matter of time until the larger user base's inertia overtakes BluRay.
Should be interesting and battlefield better understoof post holiday season 07 I think.
This will kill HD-DVD.
This will kill HD-DVD.
This will be interesting to watch as HD-DVD players which are already outselling their Blu Ray by a decent margin get cheaper and into the price range of more consumers. At what point does HD-DVD close the margins on movie shipments on a monthly basis with Blu Ray? Unless BluRay players close the gap in shipments it is only a matter of time until the larger user base's inertia overtakes BluRay.
Should be interesting and battlefield better understoof post holiday season 07 I think.
I remember a store around here that used to only carry betamax.
I expect the rental market right now for HD is a small portion of a very small market. Blockbusters support won't change anything and if there is consumer demand for HD-DVD they'll go back on their intentions in a heartbeat.
It isn't how many disks are sold, it is the perception of future support. When somebody buys a not too cheap piece of kit like an HD player, and a movie collection to go with it, they want to make sure that they aren't buying something that will turn into an expensive doorstop. That is why apart from AV enthusiasts, few people are buying HD players, and that is why Bluray players (which are not primarily purchased as HD players) dominate HD media sales.
To the potential buyer, HD-DVD support and future doesn't look good. Only one out of the big six doesn't do Bluray whereas three out of six don't do HD-DVD. Toshiba is the only big brand name CE manufacturer which supports HD-DVD whereas the all the rest support Bluray. Now add the fact that Blockbuster is discontinuing HD-DVD support, and non-AV enthusiasts will be reluctant to commit to HD-DVD.
Incidentally this is the same thing that killed off Betamax - The only big name manufacturer that supported Betamax was Sony - all the others manufactured VHS. When the video rentals dropped Betamax, that was the end for Betamax, apart from professional portable video recording applications where the superior technical specifications of Betamax proved it's worth.
Yes its good news for blu-ray, but its hardly anything to declare victory over.
Toshiba is the only big brand name CE manufacturer which supports HD-DVD whereas the all the rest support Bluray.
... only big brand name CE manufacturer...
Wrong...Hitachi, Kenwood, and Onkyo ...
The high definition disc market is only growing so slowly because of this consumer confusion, and the fact that many of them see little to no visual benefit of either format over the good old DVD-Video is another major obstacle to overcome. At least with a single, clear standard, the marketing message could be more directed and objective ("see, this is the one after the DVD, just like the DVD was the one after the CD and VHS").
Onkyo?