Blu-ray hopes for a green season
Player prices drop dramatically, but the technology isn't for everyone
![]() | Wal-Mart recently had Magnavox's NB500MG9 Blu-ray player for $198, and the price could drop to below $130 on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. |
Magnavox |
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Even before the economic downturn, consumers weren’t flocking to buy Blu-ray. The price drops on some models may help. But at a time of scrimping for many, Blu-ray is not a must-have.
You’ll get the most benefit from a Blu-ray player if you have a high-definition TV. Blu-ray will give you dynamic sound and vibrant video, taking advantage of your television’s capabilities.
“The only people who are going to buy Blu-ray players are the ones who already have high-def TVs,” said Steven J. Wilson, ABI Research’s principal analyst for consumer video technologies. “It’s quite different from the transition from VHS to DVD, because you didn’t have to buy a new TV to take advantage of DVD players.”
However, not everyone who has high-definition TV is opting for Blu-ray so far. And, if you’re sticking with a standard-definition TV, or are happy with the quality you have from your existing DVD player, and are not an obsessive videophile, you may not feel compelled to buy a player this year.
“A lot of people can’t really tell the difference between DVD quality and Blu-ray,” Wilson said. “However, he adds, “If you’ve been on the sidelines about Blu-ray, now is a good time to get your feet wet.”
Off-brand models cheaper
Earlier this year, players hovered in the $500 range. At that time, technology consultant Rob Enderle noted that for Blu-ray to succeed, players would need to land in the $200-price range, or as he called it, the “I-don’t-have-to-ask-my-wife’s-permission” number.
Prices have come down to the $250 to $400 range. The newest models have what is called a "2.0 profile." Many of the $200-or-less specials in the days and weeks ahead will be players with a slightly older “profile,” 1.1 , which came out in November 2007. Players with the first Blu-ray profile, 1.0, went on the market in 2006.)
Some of the less expensive players will be lesser-known brands, players made by companies like Funai, of Japan, Wilson said. Funai also makes players for well-known companies such as Magnavox and Sylvania, and even Best Buy’s own brand, known as Insignia, he said,
“A lot of these products are exactly the same on the inside, but the look of the player could be different,” he said.
There’s also nothing wrong with 1.1 players. The big difference between them and the 2.0 profile players, new to the market, is that 1.1 and 1.0 players don’t have a built-in Ethernet port for a high-speed Internet connection.
That’s the important feature part of the 2.0 profile, also referred to as “BD-Live.”
The Internet connection means you can download movie trailers or other studio-related features. More importantly, movies themselves can be downloaded to the player.
It’s that kind of use of an Internet connection on Blu-ray players that should help sell them. But it isn’t pervasive right now.
BD-Live “is still just being introduced into players,” Wilson said. “And it will probably take another 12 months it to make its way solidly into players.”
An Internet connection on a Blu-ray player, he said, is “the real differentiator between standard DVD players and Blu-ray players.”
Movie streaming starting to appeal
The notion of streaming movies or videos from the Internet onto devices — be they Blu-ray players, game consoles, computers or DVD recorders — is starting to take off.
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LG Electronics LG Electronic's BD300 Network Blu-ray Disc Player can stream movies from Netflix to the player. |
The player itself retails for around $400, but can be found online for about $300.
Samsung recently announced it will make two Blu-ray players that allow Netflix streaming.
Netflix is also partnering with TiVo for streaming movies to its latest generation of digital video recorders, as well as with Microsoft on its Xbox 360. The program is called the “New Xbox Experience,” and costs $7.99 a month. (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)
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