Some Blu-Ray, HD DVD Discs Sell Only 200 Copies
An anonymous reader writes "Much has been made of the strong sales for some recent high-def disc releases (such as 'Casino Royale' on Blu-ray), but a new Sony research report reveals some startlingly low sales numbers for other titles released on the next-gen formats. When disc sales of under 1000 can land you on a weekly best-sellers list, you know your format is in its infancy."
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Look elsewhere in the thread; Casino Royale is being bundled with many PS3s.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
You're Right
Did you read the article you linked to? The first 500,000 users who register on the PlayStation Network will receive a copy. Every time they did this in the past, they shipped the disc directly to the registered user and not to retail.
Besides, they sold 200,000 PS3s the first two weeks in the UK and the Casino Royal numbers two weeks after the UK launch launch were only 100,000. I think that the majority of new PS3 users would register for their free disc; therefore the free offer numbers are obviously not represented in those sales numbers.
"Really old sets" doing "790(i/p)" only? First off, 1080i and 720p are the standard HD resolutions. Interlacing is a trick only avaliable on CRT sets, so most current tvs are not "at least" 1080i, but rather they ARE 720p. The native resolution of the LCD/DLP/whatever panel is usually either 1280x720 or 1366x768, except for on the not-quite-yet widespread 1080p sets.
And, composite video is for low quality 480i. Component video allows 1080i/720p, but of course only on a high definition set. There are plenty of TVs out there with component video that only handle 480i.
Just a nitpick, but LCD sets are almost always either 1366x768 or 1080p (the break seems to be between 37" and 42" sets). DLP sets are usually 1080p, although you can still find the occasional 720p set (the point being, that it's always either 720p or 1080p, and not something in between). Plasmas are usually 1024x768. At least, that's how it is where I shop. It's probably different elsewhere. I don't think you can call a WXGA screen "720p", although it will certainly accept input at that resolution.
Yup, my cheap Blu-Ray player (or expensive PS2 and PSone game machine) plays conventional (and burned) DVDs just fine. It actually is slightly nicer to use than my dedicated DVD player; so I watch movies in the PS3 and leave TV-on-DVD in the DVD machine so "resume play" works. (It doesn't remember last-play position after eject. Hmmm, I think the PS3 does, maybe the dedicated DVD player is completely useless now.)