The tech news is full of tales of Blu-ray's disappointing performance & it's coming demise right now.
Whether that's actually true or not is hardly the point right now.
It's the impression it creates amongst the wider general public and here Blu-ray has a serious image problem along with a series of unhappy circumstances which will do nothing to help it.
Not only are the benefits Blu-ray can offer highly marginal for those with small 720p/1080i HD TVs and who do not have some fairly high-end audio kit but there is also the unlucky 'x-factor' at work here.
A global recession & a mass-market already seriously indebted.
The general public across the 'western world' face the forced belt-tightening this recession is bound to impose. Then factor in the highly relevant point that savings are at an all-time low and most are already right up to their necks in debt.
A mass take-up of the relatively expensive Blu-ray format is highly unlikely in in these circumstances.
By the time the economies pick up again it will be too late - especially as Govs across the west are planning to use additional public spending on infrastructure projects as a means of reducing the most severe aspects of the recession/credit crunch. This is particularly relevant here as it means optic fibre projects just got a huge boost and will bring forward the day when digital downloading is widespread, convenient and fast.
Blu-ray's a niche product and staying niche, it may well only have the 5yrs the Samsung guy mentioned. Get over it.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Multi-format-mayhem @ Oct 30th 2008 8:57AM
The tech news is full of tales of Blu-ray's disappointing performance & it's coming demise right now.
Whether that's actually true or not is hardly the point right now.
It's the impression it creates amongst the wider general public and here Blu-ray has a serious image problem along with a series of unhappy circumstances which will do nothing to help it.
Not only are the benefits Blu-ray can offer highly marginal for those with small 720p/1080i HD TVs and who do not have some fairly high-end audio kit but there is also the unlucky 'x-factor' at work here.
A global recession & a mass-market already seriously indebted.
The general public across the 'western world' face the forced belt-tightening this recession is bound to impose.
Then factor in the highly relevant point that savings are at an all-time low and most are already right up to their necks in debt.
A mass take-up of the relatively expensive Blu-ray format is highly unlikely in in these circumstances.
By the time the economies pick up again it will be too late - especially as Govs across the west are planning to use additional public spending on infrastructure projects as a means of reducing the most severe aspects of the recession/credit crunch.
This is particularly relevant here as it means optic fibre projects just got a huge boost and will bring forward the day when digital downloading is widespread, convenient and fast.
Blu-ray's a niche product and staying niche, it may well only have the 5yrs the Samsung guy mentioned.
Get over it.