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TALKBACK

Toshiba says HD DVD set-top players are back in front

By Susanne Ault -- Video Business,10/09/2007

OCT. 9 | UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif.—HD DVD set-tops have reclaimed their dominance over Blu-ray standalone players, according to weekly NPD Group unit sales figures cited by Toshiba.

HD DVD players began outselling Blu-ray models starting in mid-September and regained a year-to-date lead of a little over 50% through the rest of the month, said Jodi Sally, Toshiba VP of marketing of digital A/V products.

Year to date, according to NPD figures she cited, HD DVD players command 53% of sales; Blu-ray players, 44%; dual format players, 3%.

She acknowledged several Blu-ray weekly victories in the run-up to home theater installer conference CEDIA, but she told attendees at Tuesday’s DVD Forum conference, that Blu-ray victory was short lived. At the time of CEDIA in early September, Sony executives said that the launch of the company’s $499 models, which marked the cheapest available BD set-tops to date, helped boost their August sales.

“When new models hit stores there will be a surge in demand. There were some weeks where we lagged,” said Sally. “But overall HD DVD continues to dominate.”

Toshiba began launching its series of third generation HD DVD players in September. Its new entry-level model, the $299 HD-A3 is beginning to hit shelves in October.

Sally also talked up HD DVD strength within PC drives. Toshiba estimates that 5 million HD DVD drives for desktops and notebooks will be sold during fiscal 2008. She believes that should make the format competitive with the Playstation 3, which was nearing 2 million units sold in the U.S. through the summer. HD DVD laptops are closing in on a relatively attractive $1,000 price point, likely fueling the retail movement.

Toshiba believes more people are buying PC HD DVD drives with the pure intention to watch high-def movies than people who are buying the PS3. Sources have estimated that just 20% of PS3 owners have played movies on the machine.

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Submitted by: FG (sniperone9@yahoo.com)
1/30/2008 5:34:56 AM PT

bluray will lose simply because , it uses 12 year old mpeg2 codecs and HDDVD uses the tru "NEXTGEN" ac-1 etc... which clearly has a better picture quality .

Submitted by: Mike Melchor
10/17/2007 7:35:01 PM PT
Location:Warwick, RI
Occupation:Consumer..:)

Blue Ray will win out simply because of the PC advantage. Lets face it, blue has more storage capacity then HD DVD and that means everything to the PC world. Once the price point drops on Blue Ray players and burners, HD DVD will become nothing more then dust in the wind. Im sure that those people buying HD DVD players right now would have bought a Blue Ray player instead if they could have bought it for the same price. If the companies who support Blue Ray want to finally put an end to the format war, then all they need to do is eat the temporary lose in profit associated with lowering the Blue Ray players to HD DVD prices. The long term gains from doing this, sooner rather then later, will make up for the short term losses.

Submitted by: Talk Str8t
10/11/2007 3:50:56 PM PT

Why should we believe Toshiba's 5M HD DVD PC drive estimate when they had claimed they'd sell 2.5M (then dropped to 1.8M, now looking far less) HD DVD consoles this year?!?

Submitted by: cusman (kamrantu@hotmail.com)
10/11/2007 2:02:08 PM PT
Location:Fort Worth, TX
Occupation:Programmer

Why would any body want to watch a high-definition movie on some dinky desktop/laptop screen with ear-phones or crappy little built in speakers?

I use my PS3 to view Blu-Ray movies extensively on my HDTV with my sweet surround sound system.

Now if they can include HD-DVD on something like the x360 built-in then it might make sense for HD-DVD to think it has a chance with the main consumer group for HD content... which is the people that are into HD gaming.

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