Study: 29M Blu-ray Homes Worldwide In 2008
Strategy Analytics says Play Station 3 consoles will drive sales.
By Swanni
That's the conclusion of a new research study from the London-based Strategy Analytics.
The company says that with HD DVD exiting the high-def disc format war, Blu-ray sales should soar in the coming months. (Toshiba is pulling the plug on HD DVD at the end of this month.)
Sony's Play Station 3, which has a Blu-ray player inside, will drive more interest in the technology, the company concludes.
"Sony’s PS3 games console will continue to drive the Blu-ray market until 2009, after which stand-alone Blu-ray players will become the dominant segment," Strategy Analytics said in a statement.
The company added that 132 million homes worldwide will have at least one Blu-ray device by 2012.
“HD-DVD’s withdrawal leaves the way open for Blu-ray to become a major revenue earner for technology vendors and content owners alike,” says David Mercer, Strategy Analytics' principal analyst. “The 265 million homes that will own an HDTV by 2012, and Hollywood’s need for a new growth engine, represent huge incentives for the industry to coordinate marketing activities and demonstrate unified support for the successor to DVD.”
The research firm said 18.8 million Blu-ray devices will be sold worldwide this year, including four million standalone players, 13 million game consoles and nearly two million PCs.
By 2012, it estimates that 57.4 million Blu-ray devices will be sold annually, with 26.4 million sold in Europe and 22.6 million in the United States.
Comment on this article!
___________________________________________
____________________________________________
Click
TVPredictions.com to see today's Swanni
Sez.
©
TVPredictions.com
____________________________________________
Swanni (Phillip Swann) is
president and publisher of TVPredictions.com. He has been quoted in
dozens of publications and broadcast outlets, including CNN, Fox
News, Inside Edition, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The
Chicago Tribune, The Financial Times, The Associated Press and The
Hollywood Reporter. He can be reached at
swann@tvpredictions.com
or at 703-505-3064.
Click
TVPredictions.com
to read more news and features on TV
technology.
