Stalemate predicted in hi-def DVD war

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http://news.cnet.co.uk/dvdpvr/0,39029670,49282773,00.htm

14 August 2006

The battle between two hyped formats for high-definition DVD will confuse shoppers and turn many of them off the whole technology, a London-based research firm predicted on Friday.

Market research analyst Screen Digest also forecast that only $11bn of the total $39bn expected to be spent on video discs by 2010 in the US, Europe and Japan will be generated by the competing high-definition formats, the Sony-backed Blu-ray and the Toshiba-supported HD DVD.

"The net result of the format war and the publicity it has generated will be to dampen consumer appetite for the whole high-definition disc category," Screen Digest analyst Ben Keen said.

The DVD format exploded into a multibillion-dollar global industry for movie and TV studios in part because the largely universal format delivered a more convenient way to own movies than its predecessor, the VHS videotape.

"This time both formats support similar features," said Graham Sharpless, who wrote the report.

The new formats are being introduced just as DVD sales level off, after consumers have built up libraries of their favourite movies and TV shows at deeply discounted prices.

The spectre of Betamax
US electronics retailers such as Best Buy and CompUSA are frustrated by the raging format war, fearful of another decade-long tussle similar to the one between VHS and Betamax. They have been predicting a lacklustre Christmas selling season, expecting consumers to wait for one format to win.

Screen Digest predicts that the two formats will co-exist until a combined solution becomes cost-effective, rather than taking the view that one will emerge victorious or that both will flop so badly as to be driven into extinction.

All of the Hollywood studios, except Universal, have said they will release movies on Blu-ray, with the first players and titles having launched earlier this year.

While only three of the major studios have said they will release movies in HD DVD, Microsoft has thrown its weight behind the format, supporting it in the Windows Vista PC operating system and offering an external drive to connect to its Xbox 360 game console.

Sony is incorporating Blu-ray into its PlayStation 3 videogame console, due out later this year, to push its format into more homes.

Screen Digest expects that 430,000 standalone Blu-ray and HD DVD players and recorders will be sold in 2006 and 1.35 million in 2007.

By 2010, it expects about 15 million US households (21 per cent of homes with high-definition TV sets), 10 million in Europe (17 per cent) and 2.5 million (7.4 per cent) in Japan will have bought a standalone unit, while 24 million, 23 million and 15 million high-definition-disc games consoles will have been sold.

As standalone units, a Samsung Blu-ray player sells for about $1,000 (£530) in the US and a Toshiba HD DVD player for about $500.

Story Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

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