August 19, 2009 9:55 AM PDT

Sony 'cautiously optimistic' about holiday retail sales

by Erica Ogg
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Despite in the company as a whole, Sony's electronics division is looking on the bright side when it comes to the all-important winter retail season.

Looking ahead to the holidays, Sony Electronics' Executive Vice President Mike Fasulo said Tuesday at a small media gathering in San Francisco that the gadget maker is hopeful about better sales this year than last.

Sony Walkman

Sony has high hopes for its touch-screen Walkman.

(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET)

"I'm cautiously optimistic about (holiday retail sales). Though I'm cautious about saying I'm cautiously optimistic," he said. Among retailers that sell Sony products, there's also "some notion this will be a better holiday than the previous year."

Sales of consumer electronics in the 2008 holiday season, according to one survey.

Fasulo's remarks came on a day filled with announcements from Sony, both on the electronics side, and the video game division, Sony Computer Entertainment America. Although it's only August, the company, like many in its industry, is already gearing up to introduce the products it hopes shoppers will snap up before they head back to school, as well as for holiday gifts.

Sony Electronics introduced a new line of home audio equipment Tuesday, called , that it developed in partnership with Best Buy, though other retailers will eventually offer it too. are aimed at a less tech-savvy audience, with minimal setup required.

But the announcements that got the most attention are the new and its new, cheaper $299 price tag, and a new game format for the PlayStation Portable.

The natural question is whether Tuesday's $100 price cut for the PS3, which has a Blu-ray player, would in turn put pressure on Sony's standalone Blu-ray players, whose prices range from $250 to more than $700. But Sony executives declined to comment, other than to say that PS3 and Blu-ray are "different products."

Other interesting tidbits revealed during the meeting:

• While Netflix streaming has already been announced for Sony's networked TVs, Blu-ray players are next. Connecting Netflix accounts with Blu-ray players is on Sony's road map, which would put them in the same company as and . "Whatever it is people want--Netflix, Amazon--we're going to make it available," said Sony Electronics President Stan Glasgow.

• Blu-ray won't be around forever, but it is the best option for watching high-quality video for now. "Eventually people will download (movies), but broadband installation isn't there yet," Glasgow acknowledged.

• Sony thinks of Apple's iPod as "another format" it wants to support, which is why it's focused on iPod/iPhone connectivity with the new Altus audio products. "We recognize Apple has significant market share in this country," Glasgow said. "They don't have that same market share around the world, though."

Glasgow said he expects X-Series Walkman to grab some market share in the portable audio market, despite the iPod's dominance and mounting curiosity for the new Zune HD from Microsoft.

This story was corrected Thursday, August 20 to reflect that the X-Series Walkman is currently on sale.

Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who covers Apple, HP, Dell, and other PC makers, as well as the consumer electronics industry. She's also one of the hosts of CNET News' Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she's a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.
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by talking poo August 19, 2009 10:25 AM PDT
Hmmm, a Netflix streaming TV will cancel the advantage Xbox has in my mind.

A PS3 slim may be in my near future.
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by shadowysea07 August 19, 2009 11:03 AM PDT
well considering you can get a blu ray player at walmart for 100 bucks they'd be stupid not to drop the prices. I'm glad they dropped the price to 300 for the ps3 now i'm just waiting to see how much a slim will cost and if it will have backwards compatibility with ps2 and ps1 games before i buy either.
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by slave2theman August 19, 2009 11:34 AM PDT
Both the new 120 GB slim and the existing 80 GB are priced at $299. Makes you wonder if the existing 80 will go down further. From what I've read, the new slim will continue to offer the same functionality of the existing models with a couple of cheaper parts. Power and eject will be buttons now instead of touch sensors and the inner workings of the Blue Ray player will made of different components. Still no backwards compatibility with ps2 games. Personally, I'd be willing to pay an extra $50 for that feature.
by mdub311 August 19, 2009 11:41 AM PDT
beware of buying a cheap bd player. The PS3 is still one of the best bd players around. Oh and its an awesome gaming console too. Oh and it's a great media extender. Oh and it has integrated wifi. Oh and it has free online game play. Oh and it offers a pay per view service through the PSN. This is a great product from Sony.
by Jester_Paul August 19, 2009 2:39 PM PDT
@mdub311 right now, the only advantage the XBox has is it's integration with Netflix. I have been anxiously awaiting Netflix on PS3, and I believe that with this addition, consumers will flocking to Sony's console.
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by Patrick9E November 15, 2009 10:10 PM PST
Are we really renaming Christmas to "holiday"? Is this official? Is this a way of making it easier to accept that Christmas has now morphed into a freaking 4 month consumer orgy?
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