Simple clear advice in plain English

High definition DVD player sales disappoint

Players sell less than half of expected numbers

Sales of high-definition DVD players have so far failed to meet expectations, thanks to delays, consumer concerns over the competing standards and the growing trend of downloading programmes.

The Consumer Electronics Association in the US had predicted that around 600,000 HD devices would be sold this year in America, but now expects this number to be less than half. It has revised figures to 275,000 units sold, with the majority being HD-DVD players.

Sean Wargo, director of industry analysis at the CEA, commented: “We assumed there would be different brands of each player on the market, but there have been a lot of delays, particularly with Blu-ray.”

Figures are not yet available for the split between HD-DVD and Blu-ray sales, but early progress for the former is in part down to its price, which is far lower than that of an equivalent Blu-ray player.

In Europe, Sony has delayed its Playstation 3 – which comes with a Blu-ray player- until spring 2007, and is not expected to make its DVD player available here until then either.

The company claimed that the PS3 would make Blu-ray the dominant format, with over six million units in homes worldwide by spring. That prediction will now fall far short.

With the two standards camps remaining polarised, and little hope of a universal Blu-ray and HD-DVD player anytime soon (if at all), consumers in the US have taken a ‘wait and see’ attitude, and Europeans could follow suit. This would help the Blu-ray camp, giving it the chance to still make the standard the dominant format, all be it by the back door of the PS3.

But Wargo said "we would expect the lower-priced product to sell the most volume” and at the moment, HD-DVD is seen as offering better value by many consumers.

However, he added, if Blu-ray has better content combined with strong PS3 sales, it may give that format the edge.

And a less expected dampener on HD player sales has been downloadable movies. Consumers have already shown that they are willing to accept slightly poorer quality with mp3s, and Wargo believes that may be the case for films as well, where people would rather watch DVD-quality downloads because of their convenience.

“It won’t kill HD, but it will have an affect,” he said.

Reader Comments

   

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Related articles

HD TV and PC pictures illustration

High definition – what it means

It's hard to miss the HD hype, but what is it exactly? We explain the jargon surrounding it and explain what you need to enjoy HD pictures on your TV and PC

Bluray illustration

Blu-ray is here to stay, but do you have the technology for it?

Blu-ray is a popular disc format for films and games as it stores so much more on a single CD. Our Back to Basics explains what it is and how it works

Lenovo Ideacentre A320

Lenovo Ideacentre A320 all-in-one desktop computer

A great-looking PC at a decent price

Question & Answer

Q.How do I store musician and other information about...

> Read the answer

Q.Why can't my browser find the website address I typed...

> Read the answer

Q.All updates have been downloaded, so why won't Windows...

> Read the answer

Best deals on the web

img

THREE E585 Mi-Fi Take it Away Mobile Broadband - 5GB allowance

£44.97- Buy it now

img

T-MOBILE 3G Pay As You Go iPad Micro SIM

£0.10- Buy it now

img

THREE Huawei E353u Take It Away Mobile Broadband - One Month Rolling Contract

£4.99- Buy it now

Great benefits for subscribers!

Poll

Which is your preferred web browser

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

VGA

Video Graphics Array. Standard socket for connecting a monitor to a computer.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive