more from the New York Times article
While Mr. Kutaragi did not reveal a price on Wednesday, analysts said Sony would probably try to sell PlayStation 3 for about $500. While that is far higher than the $299 introductory price of its predecessor, PlayStation 2 — and $100 more than the Xbox 360 — analysts said that would probably be far below the new console's actual building cost.
Analysts also said Sony was unlikely to have delayed PlayStation 3 unless it absolutely had to, because of the console's prominent role in the DVD format war.
Blu-ray backers have continually emphasized how PlayStation 3 consoles are going to aid their cause by doubling as low-priced Blu-ray players. Toshiba has already announced that it will sell players this year using its HD-DVD standard at around $500. With most Blu-ray players expected to cost $1,000 or more, PlayStation had appeared the only hope for matching Toshiba's price.
Sony has already had a bad couple of weeks in its quest to ensconce Blu-ray as the next standard. In a sign of growing frustration with delays in the Blu-ray format, LG Electronics of South Korea said it might make machines capable of handling both formats instead of the Blu-ray-only players it originally planned.
Some analysts and people in the industry also said that the delay might reflect problems with the Blu-ray format that run beyond the copyright protection delays. Some companies have complained of difficulty finding crucial parts like the blue diode lasers used to read the discs.
Warren Lieberfarb, who helped create the first DVD format in the early 1990's while at Warner Brothers Home Entertainment, and who is now an adviser to Toshiba, said problems with Blu-ray's copy protection are "the tip of the iceberg."
"This is further evidence to anyone who has been through format wars that there is a repetition of premature and fictitious product announcements also known as vaporware," he said.