The_Iceflash wrote:We got to remember though that in 2000 DVD was at a further place consumer-wise than Blu-ray is now.
Why do people keep insisting on saying that? Can you remember the year 2000? Can you remember how even than VHS was overwhelmingly more popular than DVD? Just like how now everyone has at least one DVD player, then
everyone had a VHS player and it was still the preferred consumer choice.
According to this article (
http://research.globalthoughtz.com/inde ... ting-2010/ )
According to the Digital Entertainment Group, the total number of Blu-ray Disc playback had reached 9.6 million by the end of 2008.
(three years total: 2006, 2007 and 2008)
According to TheDigitalBits (
http://www.thedigitalbits.com/articles/ ... sales.html ) at the end of DVDs first three years the sales were 5.4m (the yearly totals for 1997, 1998 and 1999 on their chart). While these don't include PS2 DVD players I doubt the DEG totals do because according to Wikipedia (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStatio ... tion_costs ) as of August 18th 2009 around (but over) 9m PS3 consoles had been sold in the US. No way have only approximately 1m PS3 players been sold in 2009.
So it would appear from these crude numbers Blu-ray is already almost twice as popular as Blu-ray was at a similar time in its life. It's impossible to do a proper comparison from these figures as they only show year end sales in both cases, but I'm pretty sure come November 2010 there'll be a lot more Blu-ray players in the US than there was DVD players in November 2000 - the release of the Fantasia Anthology on DVD.
Edit: Seems by Detective work was unneeded - I've just found this:
http://www.avrev.com/home-theater-news/ ... mbers.html
According to the consulting firm Futuresource, Blu-ray player sales are ahead of where DVD player sales were at the same point in the lifecycle. Blu-ray has existed for consumer purchase for around four years now, and despite initially slow sales and an unfortunate economic condition, the format is doing well. Jim Bottoms, managing director of Futuresource, says that the lead Blu-ray have is impressive, but that it will never match the overall acceptance of DVD.
As for Blu-ray not matching DVD - I don't think anyone here, no matter how keen they are to support Blu-ray thinks otherwise. If DVD was launched now, it wouldn't outsell DVD! There's so many more options now for viewing films: wider cable and satellite channels, VoD, X-Box and PS3 movie downloads, internet website streaming sites etc.