> it's easy to see why Blu-ray DVRs haven't been something that manufacturers have even tried to sell the American public
It isn't easy, really, no. I don't know why you'd think that. If manufacturers are really thinking "We can only get Blu-ray to sell if we limit it to playback of HD movies", then that's extraordinarily myopic, and is a major reason why Blu-ray isn't selling.
I can't stand the format, but an HD DVR that supports Blu-ray (including burning high definition content to DVD and BD) is something I'd buy. I see the advantage of that right away.
If you limit the applications, of course you're going to see dismal sales. To deliberately refuse to sell devices that break those limits because sales are low is, well, utterly incompetent.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
squiggleslash @ Dec 8th 2008 10:42PM
> it's easy to see why Blu-ray DVRs haven't been something that manufacturers have even tried to sell the American public
It isn't easy, really, no. I don't know why you'd think that. If manufacturers are really thinking "We can only get Blu-ray to sell if we limit it to playback of HD movies", then that's extraordinarily myopic, and is a major reason why Blu-ray isn't selling.
I can't stand the format, but an HD DVR that supports Blu-ray (including burning high definition content to DVD and BD) is something I'd buy. I see the advantage of that right away.
If you limit the applications, of course you're going to see dismal sales. To deliberately refuse to sell devices that break those limits because sales are low is, well, utterly incompetent.