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Blu-ray player sales stumble
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<blockquote data-quote="The Feedster" data-source="post: 512407" data-attributes="member: 259515"><p>The latest Blu-ray sales figures from NPD Group have been far from stellar since the demise of the competing HD DVD format back in February.</p><p>Sales of standalone Blu-ray players were down 40 percent from January to February, then up 2 percent from February to March, following the death of HD DVD. Hardly the sales spike many predicted after Toshiba canned the competing high def format.</p><p><strong>DVD upscalers blamed</strong></p><p>Ross Rubin, director of industry analysis at NPD claims that cheaper upconverting DVD players (on average $70 in the US right now) are still the preference for the majority of consumers, when compared with far more expensive standalone Blu-ray players (costing American consumers $300 and up).</p><p>NPD claims Blu-ray sales should pick up nearer to Christmas, when prices should drop down to the $200 range, while research firm ABI Research are even less optimistic, claiming it will be later in 2009 before Blu-ray really goes mass market.</p><p>Meanwhile Microsoft refuses to confirm support of Blu-ray for its Xbox 360 console and seems to be sticking to its original strategy of supporting movie downloads.</p><p></p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.techradar.com/news/home-cinema/blu-ray-sales-stumble-354500" target="_blank">More...</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="The Feedster, post: 512407, member: 259515"] The latest Blu-ray sales figures from NPD Group have been far from stellar since the demise of the competing HD DVD format back in February. Sales of standalone Blu-ray players were down 40 percent from January to February, then up 2 percent from February to March, following the death of HD DVD. Hardly the sales spike many predicted after Toshiba canned the competing high def format. [B]DVD upscalers blamed[/B] Ross Rubin, director of industry analysis at NPD claims that cheaper upconverting DVD players (on average $70 in the US right now) are still the preference for the majority of consumers, when compared with far more expensive standalone Blu-ray players (costing American consumers $300 and up). NPD claims Blu-ray sales should pick up nearer to Christmas, when prices should drop down to the $200 range, while research firm ABI Research are even less optimistic, claiming it will be later in 2009 before Blu-ray really goes mass market. Meanwhile Microsoft refuses to confirm support of Blu-ray for its Xbox 360 console and seems to be sticking to its original strategy of supporting movie downloads. [url=http://www.techradar.com/news/home-cinema/blu-ray-sales-stumble-354500]More...[/url] [/QUOTE]
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Blu-ray player sales stumble
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