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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
We need that pie chart to include digital sales as well. It's about 20% of sell through so it's time. Despicable Me 2 came out this week and yet it's down 13%. Fox said they had "record" sales with this movie, on the digital version. So not including digital sales is making that pie chart more misleading as to how well sales really were.
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The whole point of the chart is to show how many units are sold, and it's obvious recreating every week. If they included digital sales, it'd be a completely different chart for a totally different thing. Physical media is dying. Sad, but what're you going to do? And DM2 has been out for some time. I frigging love those Minions.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
The same people who are buying 4k TV's.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by trespoochies
(Post 12315922)
The same people who are buying 4k TV's.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 12315709)
The whole point of the chart is to show how many units are sold, and it's obvious recreating every week. If they included digital sales, it'd be a completely different chart for a totally different thing. Physical media is dying. Sad, but what're you going to do? And DM2 has been out for some time. I frigging love those Minions.
It would be stupid to have a pie chart that constantly showed red arrows for growth, and that's what's starting to happen now. Put the growth category in there, which is digital. This is not 2010. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by trespoochies
(Post 12315922)
The same people who are buying 4k TV's.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Found this chart on mac rumors. Given my post count I can't yet post URLs or embed pics so hopefully this will be visible.
cdn.macrumors.com/article-new/2014/12/ParksAssociates-Streaming-Media-Devices-TopBrands.gif showing Roku leading (if not dominating, that was 2013) the streaming set top box market. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by dvdshonna
(Post 12294789)
I'm even tiring of picking up DVDs for $1.29 at my local pawn shops. Same price as a redbox rental, but I'm having a hard time selling them off on craigslist. What happend to all the movie collectors?
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
This weekend I saw a few Blu-Ray players priced under $50- the cheapest one I saw was $35. I think if they can get that low, there's no reason to make DVD-only players anymore and there isn't much reason to make regular DVDs either. VHS releases went away when DVD players hit that price point.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by Alan Smithee
(Post 12321521)
This weekend I saw a few Blu-Ray players priced under $50- the cheapest one I saw was $35. I think if they can get that low, there's no reason to make DVD-only players anymore and there isn't much reason to make regular DVDs either. VHS releases went away when DVD players hit that price point.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by Matthew Chmiel
(Post 12321626)
The problem is Blu-ray discs themselves now need to hit...the "bargain bin" if you will.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by Alan Smithee
(Post 12321521)
This weekend I saw a few Blu-Ray players priced under $50- the cheapest one I saw was $35. I think if they can get that low, there's no reason to make DVD-only players anymore and there isn't much reason to make regular DVDs either. VHS releases went away when DVD players hit that price point.
As for not making regular DVDs anymore, this last year 10000 DVD titles were released. Compare that with just over 2000 for Blu-ray. That means out of every 5 titles, 4 weren't deemed viable for Blu-ray and were exclusive to DVD. How can anyone even think that DVD is ever going to slink away, considering how heavily releases are slanted towards it to this present day? And because of that fact, Blu-ray since the middle of this year has actually declined at a faster rate than DVD has: 10.9% vs 10.3%. It entirely possible and even probable that this trend will continue, that Blu-ray will decline faster than DVD. A faster decline would mean that DVD is actually reclaiming market share from Blu-ray. I know it seems unfathomable, but it's becoming a reality. DVD is not going anywhere. And, if/when it does, Blu-ray is going along with it, if not before. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
It appears the widespread prevalence of streaming content is squeezing Blu-ray out at the margins. A lot of the DVD crowd are older folk not using Internet-based services as much, so that format is more insulated from the streaming threat. The elite, educated consumer with 100 Mbps fiber connections, the ones that should be snapping up BDs, are instead distracted by oodles of streaming content.
Since most of the bigger mainstream releases seem to eventually hit one of the streaming services, there is less pressing need to buy them day one. Niche content such as horror is selling as well as ever on Blu-ray, since that kind of content is far harder to check out over streaming. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 12321742)
It appears the widespread prevalence of streaming content is squeezing Blu-ray out at the margins. A lot of the DVD crowd are older folk not into Internet-based services as much, so that format is more insulated from the streaming threat. The elite, educated consumer with 100 Mbps fiber connections, the ones that should be snapping up BDs, are instead distracted by oodles of streaming content.
Since most of the bigger mainstream releases seem to eventually hit one of the streaming services, there is less pressing need to buy them day one. Niche content such as horror is selling as well as ever on Blu-ray, since that kind of content is far harder to check out over streaming. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
(largely fueled by the 2 week early release advantage) |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 12321742)
A lot of the DVD crowd are older folk not using Internet-based services as much, so that format is more insulated from the streaming threat.
Every time I go to places like Walmart, BestBuy, Costco, etc ... whether during lunch or on a busy Saturday/Sunday or Friday evening, the dvd/bluray section is almost always empty. The few individuals checking out the dvds/blurays are almost always people who looked middle aged or older. (ie. Over age 40, such as older GenX, Boomers, etc ...). Even when I end up spending almost an hour going through all the dump bins, I rarely ever see anybody younger checking out the dvds/blurays. The few times I ever seen anybody younger checking out the dvds/blurays, it's almost always some guys in their 30's or late-20's wearing a heavy metal band t-shirt (such as Ozzy Osbourne, Iron Maiden, Metallica, AC DC, etc ...), or a comic book superhero t-shirt (such as Green Lantern, Superman, Spiderman, etc ...). |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by Alan Smithee
(Post 12321801)
The new DIVX, and a deliberate attempt by the industry to kill off physical media.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Example of how great digital is:
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/9lHDR7JHhqQ" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
DIVX would have been really really nasty, if it was a success.
DIVX used triple-DES encryption, which today is still difficult to crack. In contrast, DVD's css encryption algorithm was a complete joke. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by Alan Smithee
(Post 12322355)
Example of how great digital is:
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/9lHDR7JHhqQ" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
If bandwidth was shitty and if dvds/blurays were not available at all, I may very well just do without any movies + tv shows.
When I was younger, I hardly watched any tv or movies from the late-1980's to around 2007. (Other than some Star Trek TOS reruns). In those days, I was largely ignorant and clueless about most then-current tv shows and movies. |
re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Why does the video quality look like the faded VHS boxes at Blockbuster that faced the windows?
Originally Posted by Why So Blu?
(Post 12322392)
Well, it's obvious that the dude has shitty internet.
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re: Blu-ray and DVD sales - #2, but we try harder
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 12321742)
The elite, educated consumer with 100 Mbps fiber connections, the ones that should be snapping up BDs, are instead distracted by oodles of streaming content.
I question the notion of "elite" and "educated", when it comes to dvd/bluray collectors. Anecdotally. Of the hardcore dvd/bluray collectors I have met offline over the years, most were from the lower or middle classes and/or they did not have much higher education. (Most of these individuals I met while scavenging through dvd/bluray bargain bins, or at parties hosted by other friends). The few who went through higher education, were typically individuals who partied a lot in college and majored in something "easy" like psychology or political science. (Besides myself, so far I have only met two other hardcore dvd/bluray collectors offline who had a technical background, such as in engineering or a hard science). |
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