[quote name='Chris in Cali']I don't think that's true, I think after the next holiday season the amount of people with HDTV's is going to jump way up, and many people already have one now. Is it a huge deal about the Blu-ray/HD-DVD? No, but to say people don't care about HD, and HDTV is ridiculous. HDTV's are the hottest electronic item on the market.[/quote]
It'll happen eventually, but it won't be for a couple more years. The difference between DVD and HD-DVD/Blu-Ray is that in the DVD era, all you had to do was shell out for a DVD player and the movies. Even then, DVDs didn't take off until more than 2 years after it came out (because then most people could afford it). HD-DVD/Blu-Ray, however, requires you buy a new player, a new TV (for 85% of people anyway) AND new, more expensive discs. Even when DVDs first came out, they were like max $30 for a normal movie. All that adds up and seeing as most Americans still don't buy a new TV until their old one craps out, I don't see HD-DVD/Blu-Ray seeing success that rivals DVD sales for another 3-4 years. It will take probably about 2 years just for the players to be cheap enough for most people to afford them. If anything, HD-DVD/Blu-Ray will help HDTV sales, not the other way around. As it is, unless your a gamer, HD TV programming is the only reason to own an HDTV.
Also, I think technically speaking iPods and cell phones are hotter as far as overall sales, than HDTV. HDTV is probably the fastest growing market though.
[quote name='ryanbph']I do agree with chris, HDTV tv sets have made a great improvement. It is only a matter of time before it is in every household. It is kinda like broadband internet. A couple years ago very few had it, but the subscription rate has improved a lot.[/quote]
Actually...
According to a recent report by Pew Internet & American Life Project broadband adoption in the United States is slowing down. John Horrigan, Pew's Director of Research, compared national surveys of Internet users in 2002 to 2005. Horrigan found that the intensity of Internet use (a product of connection speed and years of online experience) drives the number of online activities people perform, which in turn drives the adoption of broadband at home and Internet experience were significant factors in Internet usage. However, in 2005 only having broadband at home had a significant influence on intensity of Internet usage. This implies that there is little pent-up demand for broadband at home. We talked to John Horrigan about his findings. (processing more bits). The two factors (speed and experience) vary in their influence of use over time. In 2002 both having
"We don't see a large influx of new Internet users in the U.S. Internet's population are new users, and only 23% of them are on broadband, about half the overall rate. Current dialup users are less engaged in the Internet than past dialup users." anytime soon. 6% of the
Dialup users today are older, less affluent, and less educated than their 2002 counterparts. With switching costs still high, today's dialup users are less likely to switch to broadband than they were in 2002. The report concludes that slowing broadband growth may add pressure on policymakers to take a bold approach (municipal wireless broadband networks for example) to catch up to leading broadband countries like Korea or Canada."
Anyway, to respond to the OP and the article, I don't think HD movie formats will effect console sales at all. Even with the PS3 coming out this year at a relatively cheap price for a Blu-Ray player, I don't think either format will take off for a while. Most people that will buy a PS3 in the US aren't going to have an HDTV at that time, and probably aren't going to want to spend $30-40 per movie even if they do, especially when most DVDs these days are $15 or less and you can get an upsampling DVD player (some of which do quite a good job apparently) for the price of like 4 Blu-Ray movies. By the time Blu-Ray or HD-DVD will matter to the average gamer, a clear front runner in the console wars will have emerged again, probably the PS3. Although if PS3 sales are trailing Xbox 360 sales at that time (I guess it's possible) Blu-Ray functionality could boost PS3 sales if Blu-Ray in fact is the winning format.