Blu-ray Discs Won't Be Cheap 531
frdmfghtr writes "Red Herring has a story on the forthcoming price of Sony Blu-Ray HD DVDs. At $23.45 wholesale, they aren't cheap. From the article: 'Some of the movies to be released in the first batch by Sony are The Fifth Element, Desperado, Hitch, House of Flying Daggers, Legends of the Fall, and Terminator. Sony's wholesale price of $23.45 for Blu-ray discs is 56 percent more than the $14.99 it costs to buy a new DVD of Hitch from BestBuy.com. A Terminator DVD is available for $9.99.' Another reader suggested a link to an Ars Technica article with more information.
Blast from the past! (Score:5, Insightful)
Would you like to meet my friend, VHS? He cost $25 a pop back in 1980, had no features, and was a linear format that degraded over each use. Maybe being from the past makes me naive (sorry no dots for you), but, it seems that the point of this article -- although factual -- is totally irrelavent.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Informative)
Early adopters will cough up the money without taking notice. Late adopters won't ever have a price difference to notice.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Informative)
The only trouble is... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, but isn't the trend for hi-tech stuff to go down? Computers, mp3 plahyers, satellite radios are going down in price.
This reminds me of when CD's were introduced. LP's were $8 and CD's were $16. They told us "Unfortunately, there are only 3 plants in the world that can make these disks. As soon as more production comes on line, these will be cheaper than LP's because they're cheaper to make".
I guess they were lying.
But on the plus side, Sony woul
Re:The only trouble is... (Score:3, Insightful)
"This reminds me of when CD's were introduced. LP's were $8 and CD's were $16. They told us "Unfortunately, there are only 3 plants in the world that can make these disks. As soon as more production comes on line, these will be cheaper than LP's because they're cheaper to make". I guess they were lying."
Huh? That was back in the 80's, right? I was buying them, too. My recollection is that it was a few years before they came down to $16, but let's use your number.
$16 in 1985 dollars is $28 in 2005
Re:The only trouble is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, the CD's were probably cheaper to make, but the recordings are state protected intellectual monopolies. Pricing is set as a function of what the customers can pay, not as a function of production cost enforced by competition. Revenue when you have monopoly control is maximized when a higher number of customers are unable to afford the product, so that the more surplus capital the consumers have, t
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
"Also, if you were to buy exactly the same products in 2005 and 1997, they would cost you $23.45 and $19.90 respectively."
And you're wrong here because you're assuming everything keeps its value over time. I just bought that EXACT SAME James Bond DVD they were selling for $30 back in 1997 (to be fair, it might've been 98) new for about $10 a few weeks ago. Now if you do your Inflation magic, I think that means I just spent like $.36 1997 dollars for it or something.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3, Insightful)
You can make 500 DVDs, including packaging and inserts, for $1,395.00 -- that's $2.80 per unit in quantities of 500, e.g. http://www.dig [digitalcdr.com]
Re:New moderation needed... (Score:5, Funny)
But whats the point? (Score:2)
It reaches a stage when its very difficult to discern any real advantages "new media" has over older types. I mean, there is a limit to what resolution your eye can discern, just like in printing; There's no point in going any higher than 300 dpi (professional offset printing resolution). Once you don't have problems with blurriness or ghosting, it really can't get much better. They either need to produce an entirely different (immersive?) experience, or make bigger screens cheaper. I'd drop a grand on a 1
Re:But whats the point? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, but it's not been reached with DVDs - this also applies to red book CDs (ears, not eyes, obviously).
Re:But whats the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anybody excercising a certain degree of perception, though, can see that DVD could easily stand to be bumped up a little bit. Would it necessary matter to most people? That's a different question entirely.
Re:But whats the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
Beyond that, when you're talking about printing, you have all sorts of colors, tints and effects that
Re:But whats the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
I dropped a tad over a grand a year ago for a 6 foot wall screen - it'd be bigger, but my viewing wall has an inconveniently-placed door...
price (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
Price is really only part of the picture that makes Son of DVD not look so hot. The price for incremental improvement is a put off, being asked to run the format treadmill so soon after a previous switch is another.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, to be fair, it's unlikely that most of us will re-purchase our entire video library, even those of us who feel we can afford a several-thousand-dollar HDTV before much decent content for it is even available. I mean, I don't have an HDTV set yet so maybe I can't speak for those people, but there's not a very high probability that I'm going to ever buy a Blu-Ray copy of "Best in Show" or "A Mighty Wind" to replace my current DVD copies, even if I could. I'll buy HD versions of a subset of my collection, like the Lord of the Rings films - things where the detailed cinematic scenes are really spectacular.
The high-end, early adopter crowd *is* going to replace much of their collection... don't forget these are the people you knew who had laserdiscs. Most of us will replace movies very selectively, buy only new movies, and wait for the price to come dow,... and it will. To be honest, I thought these things would start out at around $50, about the price of a new video game, and from this it looks like they may be cheaper than that, really sooon.
Another thing that's different- I think you'll be able to sell your old DVDs pretty readily. The HD discs and DVD discs will live side-by-side for some time. Premium stuff does sell, though, and there's a lot of demand for HD content that currently isn't being met by the 10 or so HD TV channels most folks in the U.S. are currently limited to.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
Recall Laserdisc had quality improvements over VHS (400 lines v 200 lines), and didn't stretch like VHS, and was more expensive. Kicker was the laserdisc was a 1980's technology, and it was released too close to VHS IMO.
People took to DVD's because it had a lot of benefits - resolution, and likeliest the biggest factor, storage size was probably the biggest attraction. Retailers liked it too because they could stor
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3, Informative)
That's as maybe, but get a DVD from the library, used, Netflix, etc. Apparently some people do use belt sanders on their discs. I've often had to use DVD decrypter just to recover a playable copy of a disc I was legally entitled to view, and even that doesn't always work.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
New DVDs are about 20 euro here. And that doesn't mean it's a super special edition.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
On the video side, unless the encryption/DRM crap is broken on HD-DVD and Blu-Ray (or there is a full-featured player for Linux that I can use on my Myth boxen and desktops a
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
Would you like to meet my friend, VHS? He cost $25 a pop back in 1980, had no features, and was a linear format that degraded over each use. Maybe being from the past makes me naive (sorry no dots for you), but, it seems that the point of this article -- although factual -- is totally irrelavent.
Slashdot has now been visited by the Ghost of Media Past. Will the Ghost o
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
When VHS/Betamax came out there weren't really any other widely available options for people seeing movies in their homes. Even at $25 (in those days), assuming you weren't talking about titles still in the rental window, that was a novelty.
Laserdisc arrived but was cumbersome, with players pretty expensive in North America and titles not as widely available. There was good jump in technology but it was just not worthwhile for the average consumer.
DVD had a similar jump in technology but actually increasing ease of use over VHS. When DVDs came out, they were at least $20 in stores. I still remember seeing a copy of Universal Soldier on sale for over $50 at Best Buy. But, if you looked online, especially during the
I don't think the price of the discs is going to be this next generation's hurdle. TVs that properly display HD content are still at least $1000 even after dramatic price drops over the past couple of years. TVs where the average person can tell the difference between DVD and HD content are going to be even more expensive.
But the main thing is plain and simple: What, besides video and audio quality, do BluRay and HD-DVD offer?
Absolutely nothing. It doesn't make DVDs any easier to use. From what I have heard, I don't think they are scratch-proof. You can't easily record, like VHS or Tivo.
There's been an endless parade of products which hawked higher quality without a change in convenience. If quality was everything that mattered, all movies would come with a DTS track, HD adoption would've spread like wildfire, and people would own SACD players and HD-VCRs. I don't think HD on DVD is going to fail. But what is going to happen is that people will only buy it after it's been out a few years and most new DVD players play the other two formats as well. Any studio exec that things that people are going to replace all of their exiting DVDs with BluRay titles should start acting a bit more logically before their unrealistic expectations bit them in the ass.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm. I don't what can be easier than putting the tape in and pressing play. Surely you're not suggesting that putting a disc in, waiting for the menu screen, and then fiddling with usually poorly-designed menus is easier?
When it comes down to it, my grandmother has never had problems getting a VHS tape to play. I have had problems getting a DVD player to play (lost the remote and the disc wouldn't just play the $%$%#@ mov
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
As opposed to, putting the tape in, waiting for it rewind, then pressing play. Then adjusting tracking if necessary. No, wait, just a bit more, OK, now it looks good. Then pressing fast-forward to go over the commercials and trailers, then hit play again when the actual movie starts. Oh, you want to see the scene where hero loses the bad guy in a car chase. OK, I think that's about 25 minutes in... etc.
Yes, I am suggesting it's easier.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
But "pressing fast-forward to go over the commercials and trailers, then hit play again when the actual movie starts" is FAR superior to having to sit through previews every time you pop in the DVD becasue the DVD can circumvent your fast-forward controls to prevent you from skipping the previews. (This is especially prevalent on rentals.)
"Oh, you want to see the scene where hero loses the bad guy in a car chase."
No, I just want to watch the f'ing movie. If anything, I'm exceedingly happy that VHS tapes are bad at that sort of thing becauses it keeps my friends and family from jumping into replay after replay instead of just watching the movie. Unlike CDs where I might want to pick out a particular song in an album, I rarely skip around during the movie. I'm guessing if you put random access of the movie through the grandmother test, she won't do it all that often either (even if it is easy to do). Now TV shows on DVD are another story...
Like I said earlier, there are a LOT of advances DVDs made over VHS. I still stand by my statement that DVDs are harder to use for their typical use (watching movies) than VHS tape. It is very nice though not having to worry about if you're getting an SP, LP/EP, or SLP tape when you buy a movie in the DVD age.
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3, Funny)
A great example of this was the old rented VHS versions of Fast Times at Ridgemont High. If you rented a copy that had been on the shelves for awhile, the part where Phoebe Cates gets out of the pool (Cars playing Moving in Stereo in background) and she walks up to Brad undoing her top...
That part of the
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:4, Insightful)
You're missing a big point and that is: how much value do the new formats give you over the existing format?
VHS vs. broadcast/cable:
DVD vs. VHS:
BLU-ray vs. DVD
Both VHS and DVD offered a lot of value over the existing options. Not so with BLU-ray.
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:3, Insightful)
Except of course Blu ray will never be as cheap as the comparable DVD which will never be as cheap as the comparable VHS. Why? Because each time, the manufacturers take the opportunity to hike the prices as far as
Re:Blast from the past! (Score:2)
--mike
Newsflash! (Score:5, Insightful)
Related Stories:
But seriously, why wouldn't they be more expensive? You get a much, much nicer end product. Why would you pay $10 for a hamburger at Outback when you can get one for a dollar at Mickey D's? They both feed you (poorly!), but one is much more pleasant to eat than the other. How about a music file? Are you happy with a 64kbps encoding of a tune, or do you prefer a lossless encoded version?
It's the same with an HD movie -- it's much more pleasant to look at HD than an NTSC quality movie.
Perception (Score:2)
Hence all the advertising, marketing, branding...
Re:Newsflash! (Score:2, Funny)
Their Ice Cream bars alone are $3 and we paid $8 a pop for the cheap burgers in TommorrowLand.
For my money though, the Captain America burger is much better at Universal.
Re:Newsflash! (Score:2)
Re:Newsflash! (Score:2)
You get a much, much nicer end product.
Do you?
For 90% of the population in the USA, you don't get a nicer product. These are the people with standard definition TVs. They've got no reason at all to spend the extra dollars on HD-BLU-DVD-RAY.
For the other 10%
The crucial "early adopters" who pay the big bucks and have esoteric systems are going to have problems, many of them still have non-HDCP displays. These guys are likely to be pissed about being left
Re:Newsflash! (Score:4, Insightful)
The cause for a bit of thought here is that there is no real perceived value to 98% of America and abroad who have not adopted nor will adopt HD for another 10 years when it is supposedly mandated but will continue to be pushed back as it has so far. If everyone owned HD gear and there were no HD media, then people would pay $40+ for a Blu-Ray... but that isn't the case and the natural reaction will be exactly the reactions seen here.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Shocking prediction. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Shocking prediction. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nah, prices will come down because they will have to compete against standard DVDs for quite a few years (until HD TV penetration gets significantly higher).
Right now they are on bleeding edge prices. Just like DVDs when they were new. I paid $160 for a DVD Player drive in 98, and $20+ for 'The Cro
Re:Shocking prediction. (Score:3, Insightful)
-Rick
Re:Shocking prediction. (Score:3, Interesting)
Errr, ummm. Yeah, that's basically true. All DVDs an average person buys will be 720x480. However, the standard also allows for eg. 352x480 video in MPEG-1, PCM audio, etc. Still, you'll never see anything like that from a major studio, which is where most everyone buys DVDs.
Not unless you'
Re:Shocking prediction. (Score:5, Informative)
"They'll claim that in time, the price to the consumer will come down. (See also: "The history of compact disc pricing")."
For the benefit of our younger readers who might think CD prices have always been about the same: when I started buying them in 1984, I paid about $20 per CD, to play on my $250 CD player.
That's the equivalent of a $37 CD playing on a $460 CD player, kids!
By comparison, in 2003 the average price of a new CD was $13.42 [boycott-riaa.com], and by the end of 2004, it was down to $12.95. In other words, CD prices have fallen by 2/3 in the time I've been buying them. I wish I could say the same thing about clothes, food and gas.
The point is: just be glad you were born in the 80's or 90's. You're paying 66% less for CDs than I was at your age, and if you happen to be a fan of P2P, you can get all the music you want for free. The other point is that people who try to tell you that CD prices haven't gone down are, quite simply, lying to you.
not surprising ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:not surprising ... (Score:2)
Blank DVDs £25 each. At least they tended to work.
Want my prediction for the coming years?
The price of blank media will fall, and its capacity and quality shall rise.
Do I get my award now? Or a job in journalism?
I've got more:
CPU power will rise, but at a different rate to now.
Storage capacity of home PCs will continue to outgrow actual usage.
And for the finale':
People will carry around devices that allow them to both talk to and see other people, even if they a
Hitch! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hitch! (Score:2)
Re:Funny mod HOWTO (Score:2)
It should also be noted that the "Funny" mod grants the post creator no positive karma.
Adult Film (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't have an HD-TV quite yet, since I haven't had to buy a TV in years, but I'm not sure I'll be willing to buy these movies at these prices, had I one. Especially not until there's a much bigger library than the 50ish that are apparently expected this year.
The real measure of success for the nextgen optical media will likely be the adult film industry (in addition to video game consoles). Everyone talks about gaming, but it would appear that there's going to be a pretty deep divide in consoles.
And Blu-Ray very well may be the winner [avn.com] in the adult film realm.
The adult film maker Digital Playground, which claims to control 40 percent of the US adult DVD market and is reported to have sales of $12.6bn in 2005, today told Adult Video News (AVN) that they've decided to support the Blu-ray format and release movies as soon as hardware becomes available.
Re:Adult Film (Score:3, Funny)
Move On Nothing To See (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Move On Nothing To See (Score:2)
Or maybe when a corporation is large the people that decide which DRM goes into their music aren't the same people wearing lab coats trying to bring people technology which makes their lives better and easier.
Nah, that almost makes it sound like they aren't an evil-money-grubbing-out-to-cut-your-throat-rape-y o ur-wife-and-steal-your-belongin
In Other News: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In Other News: (Score:2)
The other thing I am wondering about is what wil
Re:In Other News: (Score:2)
$400 for an 27" HDTV monitor with no tuner.
$150 for a comparable 27" analog.
Those are actual best in-store prices after a day of shopping...there's always someone who has a link to show that there's an HDTV for $xxx cheaper than what I listed, but I couldn't have walked out of a store with it that day so it's not really relevant.
Two months ago I bought an analog TV because it was cost effective. I have absolutely nothing in my entertainment center that justifies spending $250 more on a TV
Re:In Other News: (Score:2)
Solution to expensive DVDs (Score:5, Insightful)
Summary drops some relevant info (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Summary drops some relevant info (Score:2)
The price seems way too high to make it in the mass market. Anyone that buys one of these things is going to look like a gearhead/idiot when you can get 99% of the quality for a third of the price on DVD.
Great Strategy (Score:3, Funny)
On another note, I still buy VHS every chance I get. At least when a HVS tape gets a little worn out it just keeps on going with some blips and squiggly lines instead of just.......stopping and displaying a "Can't Read" error.
Re:Great Strategy (Score:2)
HD-DVD vs Blu-Ray (Score:4, Informative)
With regard to the competition, ZDNet has coverage [zdnet.com] of Blu-Rays expected cost compared to HD-DVD based on the retooling cost, which experts expect could be up to $1 billion worldwide for Blu-Ray, and one tenth of that for HD-DVD (Which relies on pretty simmilar technology to existing DVDs).
One other point which may help out HD-DVD is the materiel cost. HD-DVD uses the the same materiels as DVD, whereas Blu-Ray uses a "high-tech film layer currently produced only by Sony."
What might be most damaging for Blu-Ray however, is Microsoft's direct support for HD-DVD. They've already announced that Longhorn will support HD-DVD, and the XBox360 will be recieving an HD-DVD addon. (Its in various news sources that I won't ref here).
This may be a Betamax type thing where the technically superiour device doesn't win due to corporate activity.
Obligitory wikipedia links:
Blu-Ray [wikipedia.org]
HD DVD [wikipedia.org]
Betamax [wikipedia.org]
That's wholesale, not the consumer price (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh boy! (Score:2)
Oh wait, I don't have any SACD or DVD-A discs. I do have a couple of DTS CDs, but I've had those for six or seven years.
Ending price? (Score:2)
How will this affect PS
Who is talking about Blu-Ray? (Score:4, Insightful)
Only the Slashdot and like-minded crowd, that's for sure. Average Joe movie-watcher on the street knows nothing about Blu-Ray. When the DVD came along to be the next big format, it was quite clear to the consumer what the difference was between it and VHS. In this case the lines are a bit more blurry. Let's put it this way; I can explain to and show my 48 year old uncle why he might want to start watching DVD's instead of VHS; i'll have a much harder time telling him why he wants to buy a Blu-Ray movie as opposed to a cheaper DVD of the same title.
So what? (Score:2, Insightful)
Bring me any consumer technology which doesn't have a higher price point when it first hits the public, and then lowers when demand increased. Let's try an easy one: DVD's. I got my player in 1998 and almost every DVD on the market cost upwards of $30. Did I still buy them? Yes! Why? Better resolution, amazing sound, no annoying tape winding, rewinding to find the spot I left off at!!!
Seriously, even if Blu-Ray DVD's hit the consumer market at $30-40, people will STILL be buying them. There is a WHOLE
Re:So what? (Score:2)
The DVD's I can rip to DIVX AVI's- put an entire season on one DVD and take that on the road in my portable Toshiba DVD player that plays AVI's.
Seriously- high quality HD format entire season on one DVD.
If my copy gets destroyed (as one disk did during the trip), I just reburn it.
If my blue ray disk is destroyed, stolen, or apparently even gets a minor scratch in the wrong place- I LOSE EVERYTHING.
No thanks.
---
P
Prices (Score:2)
DVDs have been around since 1996 in Japan and 1997 in the US (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD/ [wikipedia.org]). Though I can't find the prices at which DVDs were originally released I'm sure most were more than $10. Note that Sony is not giving a suggested retail price. The company is letting the market determine that.
Re:Prices (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Prices (Score:4, Informative)
VHS movies had a rental window when they'd be sold to Blockbuster-style outfits for $80+ for a few months before dropping to $20-30 for everyone else to buy. DVDs never had rental pricing; they started at around $20-30 and went down from there as they got old and/or new "special editions" arrived on the shelves. I don't recall either format having an obscene initial cost for general consumption.
doesn't seem wise (Score:3, Interesting)
Fully understanding that new/better technology is traditionally more expensive than old/lesser technology, I think this is a poor decision. If the next-gen dvds were marketed at a price closer to that of current-gen dvds, adoption would catch on quicker ("Why not pay $2 more?") and the format war would seem less important. As is, you're paying a huge entry fee to get into one of the two next-gen formats, then getting shafted again in price comparison to current generation dvds. Is the quality worth the extra $10-$15 bucks per dvd AND the price of the player? Not to me; not to many, i would guess.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I know that I would be more willing to adopt a format in speculation of the final winner if the prices weren't so much more than current dvds.
This Will Go Down Like CDs Did (Score:5, Insightful)
In 1984 I could buy a brand new record with up to 40 minutes of music for $7.00. When CDs first came out they were around $36.00 a pop for the same album at my local retailers. Of course people griped saying "how are we ever going to afford to buy those"? But then the prices dropped until you could buy the same 40 minute album on a brand new CD for $15.00 in 1988. Since then the average price of CDs has gone up and you are typically paiying $19-21 per new CD. Of course none of the arguments that the industry used at the time ("we need to make up for the cost of retooling from making records to making CDs") hold any water today. They're just greedy fuckers. But, the buying public, while they might moan and groan about it are still going to pay the price when they want the latest pap that and RIAA conjured "artist" puts out. There is one thing missing in the original CD Audio spec. DRM.
Enter BluRay and other DRM controlled forms of media. After reading the Slashdot article on CableCard and DCAS the other day (end-to-end encryption for cable television), you better believe devices to play HD DVDs will be no different. Not only will you be completely lubed up and owned by the MPAA, but if you really want to watch their products you'll have to pay the money they ask. No matter how high or unfair the pricing. Welcome to corporate fascism. The price today might be in the $25.00 neighborhood. They'll say, "we need to amortize our investment in this new technology and then the prices will come down as the market grows". And the prices will go down temporarily. But in ten year's time, you'll be paying $30 a disc and likely will just accept it instead of raging at these assholes like I do.
Now, add to this element that the only people who read Slashdot that count (in my book) are the so-called hobbyists... and that we are targetted as "undesirable crackpots", well you see where this is going. The funny thing is that there was a time in America when the guy who built his own electronic equipment at home was looked at as a neighborhood hero or potential "genius". Today, we're looked at like the Unabomber. We're told by these corporations and their brainwashed customers, "Why don't you just do what any other normal person does and just buy a damn HD DVD player fer christ sakes"! We do't want to do this because the commercial products are typically lacking in base functionality that we would prefer to have. For example, you SHOULD be able to skip the advertisting at the beginning of the DVD and get straight to the film. However, the MPAA doesn't want you doing that so commercial players aren't supposed to be able to do this. It's not a technical limitation (although they might try to make it seem like one), it's an artificial limitation calculated to benefit them. And it's unfair. Fortunately, players like Xine and MPlayer allow you to bypass these tracks altogether since they usually add nothing to your viewing experience. That's just a single example of the crippling that the MPAA forces on consumer devices. And it's only going to get worse.
Re:This Will Go Down Like CDs Did (Score:3, Insightful)
You've really got a lot of rage working there. Just FYI, nobody's FORCING you to buy Hitch on DVD. The great thing is, you get to choose - if you don't think $30+/disc is worth it, you DON'T HAVE TO BUY IT. Jackbooted thugs from Sony are not going to break into your home at 2AM, grab $35 from your wallet, and force you, a la Clockwork Orange, to watch Hitch.
I wish a lot of things were cheaper - I try not to translate that wish into hatred of those who won't sell them to me
I think I'll wait (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's see if I get this right. I'm going to pay more money for a DVD that I can only play in a player that will cost $1800. Yeah, right. Oh, and it may not end up being the generally acceptable format? Ooookay!
I've got a better idea! Why don't I just sit here and wait? That's right, I'm going to wait about five or so years. That way, the price will have dropped on the players, and the battle over formats will have settled out. I figure I can somehow struggle along without having seen the movies you're releasing in this format, probably because...well... I've already seen them.
This is yet another repetition of the past. A NEW! HOT! TECHNOLOGY! which is supposed to IMPROVE! our ENTERTAINMENT! EXPERIENCE!. Ok, fine. But.. um, we have a couple of different formats and the prices are enormous! Betamax/VHS. DVD/VHS. Players running around one to two grand. Been there, done that, got the t-shirts. What I've learned is that there's no rush. Wait. Prices will come down on players. Format types will standardize. You won't feel scre^H^H^H^Hvictimized by the manufacturers/retailers.
Netflix (Score:5, Interesting)
the prices will come down (Score:2, Insightful)
I remember how expensive CD's and CD players were at first, too. You will pay a premium for being an early adopter. For everyone else it means that non blue ray DVD's will drop in price.
So why can't I trade in my DVDs? (Score:5, Interesting)
I recall one of the biggest arguments against P2P sharing of movies, music, etc. is that I don't "own" the content - I license it. If I license the content by owning a copy of "Movie A" on DVD, why is it that I have to buy another license of "Movie A" on Blu-Ray at full price, instead of just the price of the new media?
In the licensing model this makes sense, but it's not going to be available. The "ownership" model would support having to purchase new content when the format changes, but then I'd technically be able to put it on P2P or back it up to my HD, no?
Why the catch-22?
You're buying the extra bits (Score:3, Interesting)
But it's not; on the Blue-Ray disc you get the high definition version of the movie and this is a different product.
The reverse question makes some sense, though -- if you buy a Blue Ray of some movie and it is otherwise identical content-wise to the DVD version of the same movie, shouldn't you be entitled to get a DVD copy of the movie for the cost of the media,
The price is no surprise... (Score:3, Insightful)
Right now, people are clamoring for HD content, and these movies are really the first taste. There is a HUGE demand relative to the available supply.
I am utterly unsurprised at this pricing. It means we can expect retail prices about double DVD's for some time. The only good news there is that DVD prices will continue to fall as HD movies see increased competition and lower their prices.
This will continue until two things happen:
This will allow volume effects to occur that allow for pricing reductions. Until then studio's will make more money from their "outdated" DVD sales pipeline than they could possibly generate from HD movies.
So, give it a year or so. When there are a few million PS3's out there with BD-ROM's and people use them for watching movies (like they do PS2) then prices will tumble.
Since I am in a predictive mood, I'll say that we'll get price breaks on per movie costs when we have two or more studios with 100+ titles released in HD format. We'll start to approach current DVD pricing when we have four or more studios with 1000+ titles available for purchase, and there are 200+ TV series for sale.
If you think that is unreasonable drop by a Best Buy and count the number of titles they have on display.
As an additional side effect, there will be a point when HD discs "take over" the market from SD video. WHen that happens DVD prices will tumble well below what we have seen VHS prices drop to- because DVD is much cheaper than VHS to replicate on a per disc basis. You can make a profit at retail on a $5 DVD, but you can't on a $5 VHS.
Unlike the RIAA which depends on you buying a pice of music you are going to listen to time and again, the film industry depends on you buying LOTS of content you use infrequently and continuing to buy more and more. As a result of this difference the film/video folk will drive prices down for older products to clear inventory so they can get new product out the door.
Remember that with time you'll be able to make a profit at retail on a $5 BD-ROM, so they have no qualms about dropping prices. They have already seen the value of volume sales.
Price of Blu-Ray starts at $17.95 (Score:3, Informative)
Being that the average profit for large retailer for DVDs is ~$4, I would expect Blu-ray disks to cost $20-$25 catalog titles, and $25-30 for new-releases depending on how agressively the retailer is trying to sell them. Many retailers (BestBuy, Walmart, etc) also also sell them close to cost to bring foot traffic into their stores.
IMHO, seems like a resonable price for 1080p movies, the title of this thread should really say "Blu-ray Discs Won't Be Cheap (but not that expensive either)"
Also correction for Zonk, the poster of this thread.
>>Movies like "Hitch" and "Terminator 2", etc. are catalog releases, and won't be sold wholesale at $23.95.
>>Also, for the statement "forthcoming price of Sony Blu-Ray HD DVDs", Blu-ray isn't HD-DVD. They are different formats.
Re:Hitch!?!? (Score:2)
Hmmm, I just bought my first Blu-ray at Best Circuit. Lets wander over to the Blu-Ray dvd aisle to pick up my first movie. Desperadoes? Pass. House of Flying what? Pass. Hmmm, Terminator sold out. 5th Element? Well the chic
Re:Amazon Star Trek Super-Combo (Score:2)
Have you considered... not?
Re:Amazon Star Trek Super-Combo (Score:3, Informative)
a DVD-18 double sided, double layer on both sides = 17.1 GB
Ultimate collection comes on 212 discs = 1700/212 = $8 per disc
Bluray discs (dual layer) are stated to be at least 46GB and at most 54GB
so, 17*212=3604GB in total for the collection.
54GB : 6404/54 = 119 discs * 23.45 = $2790.55
46GB : 6404/46 = 140 discs * 23.45 = $3283
So, in theory, it'll be way more expensive on BluRay. ** prepares to have maths shown to be wrong **
Re:Amazon Star Trek Super-Combo (Score:3, Interesting)
so, 17*212=3604GB in total for the collection. 54GB : 3604/54 = 67 discs * 23.45 = $1571.15 46GB : 3604/46 = 79 discs * 23.45 = $1852.55
So initially more expensive, but eventually less.
Re:Can someone please explain.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, that's the only benefit of blu-ray as a video format. it can give you orders of magnitude higher resolution. For those people who want to see the pores on Will Smith's nose in Hitch, it's quite impressive.
I'm just not enough of a videophile to care. And with the upcoming format war (HD-DVD vs BLU-RAY) I'm going to sit back and wait either for a clear winner to emerge, or for someone to invent a dual-format player so that I don't have to care what format I'm buying.
At least it's looking like both formats will have backwards-compatible players so that standard DVDs won't require a seperate player.
Re:Can someone please explain.... (Score:5, Informative)
That statement is inaccurate.
NTSC DVD: 640x480=307200 pixels
HDTV: 1920x1080=2073600 pixels
2073600/307200=6.75
That isn't even a single order of magnitude more pixels - just little more than half. If we were comparing PAL instead of NTSC the difference with HDTV would be even less.
Dan East
Re:Can someone please explain.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I wouldn't call almost 7X "a little more than half"... That's a lot more than half. In fact, it's more than 2/3rds, and not far from 3/4ths (an order of magnitude).
Yes, but then you have to take into account the 20% higher refresh rate, then it all evens out to about the same ~6X improvement.
Re:Can someone please explain.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, what is important is how much the human eye is able to see. It is well tested that the limit for where humans can percieve more scanlines is about 8-9x screen size for SDTV, and 3-3.5x screen size for HDTV. Or if we want to express it in degrees, if you want a perfect image an SDTV screen should take up 6 degrees of your field of vision, a HDTV screen 20 degrees. Hell, we could double the resolution to 3840x2160 and still only cover about 60 degrees
BluRay goes beyond HDTV. (Score:3, Informative)
BluRay goes beyond HDTV (1080i or 720p) to 1080p. That is 1920x1080 60 frames per second. That's 124,416,000 pixels/second.
That's about 1.1x, which is an order of magnitude. That comes in just under the wire as "orders of magnitude" more resolution.
And before you say "my DVD does progressive", it may output progressive, but the data on the disc is interlaces, your DVD is doi
Re:Can someone please explain.... (Score:2)
Re:Sony has effectively killed Blu-Ray (Score:3, Insightful)
Lets face it, we were ripped off when DVD's first appeared on the market with $1000 DVD players. It was a cash grab by the industry to make a quick profit before the mainstream got a hold of them. They might cite that R&D costs make the original DVD players expensive, but get real. DVD technology is based on 20+ year old CD technology. It was adapted to work with higher capacity disks. Today you can get a DVD player for $30.
Same goes for next gen DVD.