Comments on: Blu-ray players rumored to hit $249 by autumn
Sony is said to be dropping the price of its entry-level Blu-ray player to $300 in September, with competitors going even lower.
Sony is said to be dropping the price of its entry-level Blu-ray player to $300 in September, with competitors going even lower.
The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com
Add this feed to your online news reader
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
To general joe public you might be able to get away with that, but people who read this feed would/should know there is more to it.
As always it's system dependent. Blu-ray will look like DVD if you've a system that 'maxxes out' on DVD. But put it on a FullHD display that correctly handles 24p, and then you've got clearcut advantages.
The fuss they make and the expense they have incurred over the TV. Truth is its like for them the big flat TV is like the BMW in the drive, they like it sitting it there but know about as much about how it works.
One friend who has a big screen HDTV was holding off buying a new DVD player when his exisiting one broke. I asked why not get a BR? He said he'lll wait for the price to go down. I gave him a spare Phillips regular DVD player I had. It's like TIVO in the early days unless you see it and have it explained to you. We've had friends over and they saw TIVO and the next time we wheere in their house they had it as well. But that was easier fro people to get once they saw it than BR and the Sex and the City episode sold it to many of our friends wives.
I don't get it, but basically people are penny wise and dollar foolish.
Meanwhile, once this catches on maybe Sony will recover enough to become the equivalent of what Sharp was 15 years ago. Maybe. If they're going to get past that anytime in the near future, they'll need a new Trinitron that beats Panasonic/Pioneer Plasma on the market in the next 18 months and a walkman that emits a signal that kills all ipods and iphones within a 1000 foot radius on the market by Christmas.
be happy!
pmj
As such, the Blu Ray players coming out with on-board DTS Master and Dolby Digital True HD decoding that can plug into these older generation receivers via analog connections, will be more appealing to the masses when considering the switch to a Blu Ray player.
With several reports of models coming out this Holiday season, it would be a wise marketing decision by the manufacturers to sell these at a $200 to $300 price point if they want Blu Ray to get any recognition and a successful product launch.
With that said, I feel the biggest problem is the cost of Blu Ray Movies/Media. Movie titles in the $30 to $40 price range will kill the HD Format all together... It has for me, I for one will not pay that kind of money for the movies, no matter how good the movie is, or even if they are brand new releases. The greed is outrageous(Thanks to Sony, Again!)! $20 tops, but more on par is the $12 to $16 price range that is most affordable to the masses and it would also make this format take off like gang busters.
At Best Buy and several other retailers along with discount wholesale clubs, BJ's, Sam's, Costco etc., I see the prices averaging $30 week after week on a majority of their popular titles. They never run out of these titles either. You know why? Because people aren't buying them, and most likely won't either until they re-price to an affordable price point!
Reality Check; Today, two Blu Ray titles with taxes come out to roughly $65, that's just about a full days wages for the average consumer. Damn rip-off and a damn shame too because this will kill the HD format imho.
If I had a decent internal decoder Blu Ray player I would Only rent my titles until the prices dropped, but then again I might just never buy one at all if the prices remain at the above $20 range. Maybe I'll rent the player too, that way I won't feel bad owning another piece of obsolete technology when it fails due to the greed.
- by AnthonyNYC August 27, 2008 6:46 PM PDT
- I agree totally about Sony price greed on BluRay titles but I guess they need to recoup the millions paid to forcibly win the format war, rather then let the people decide. HD-DVD's were more money than DVD's yes, but still about $5 cheaper than BluRay.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(8 Comments)I pay for cable, and have their DVR (sorry for those who paid for tivo with only one tuner) and go thru weeks guide setting HD movies to record from HBO, Showtime and Cinemax. All the while I can watch any other show while it records my movies in the background, then in a few days, i have more HD quality movies to enjoy than I can have time to watch.
Give Sony $400, or even $250 so i can buy 1 movie at $30 a pop?
Are they nuts? For that money you can do dinner and a movie!
And I only watch movies once, maybe twice even if I own them.
If they want BluRay not to fail, price of discs should be same as DVD immediately.
And not only are bluray discs not selling in costco, same stack of 9 blurray players in there, last 3 weeks of my visits, wonder who bought that one? LOL
And is he buying any of the discs with dust on them in costco?
Retailers want quick turn around on their money, when they see expensive discs sitting on shelves and cheap dvd's flying off them, they will stock less BluRay and more DVD, it's business.