backtop


Print E-mail del.icio.us 38 comment(s) - last by Shadowmaster62.. on Apr 1 at 10:37 AM

Best Buy rids itself of HD DVD

Although Best Buy ran sales for HD DVD, at one point 30 percent off on all stock, it appears that the format’s run at the big box retailer is officially at an end.

Completely bypassing any last-ditch firesale action, Best Buy has instructed its retail locations to remove all HD DVD product from store shelves. As posted on AVS Forum, an official memorandum sent to stores read, “Mosaic [field marketing company] will be in all stores before open on March 26 to pull and send back all HD-DVD titles. The representative will fill out the sendback paperwork and create a manifest for each individual tote. They'll also flex all Blu-ray inventory across the space where HD-DVD was featured.”

The memo also describes the removal of signage that still mentions HD DVD: “Mosaic will remove any header signs that list both Blu-ray and HD-DVD, as they are no longer valid signs in the store. Stores will be responsible to order additional Blu-ray sign rails to fill in the space left by the removed HD-DVD signs.”

While some HD DVD diehards were still waiting for further sales from brick and mortar stores, it won’t be happening at Best Buy. Select Circuit City locations are reported to also be sending HD DVD stock back for refund rather than for sale purposes. The stores that still carry the format are clearing product at 50 percent off.

With Best Buy and Circuit City soon washing its hands of HD DVD software, the retailers only dealings with the format may be through consolation promotions such as a free $50 gift card or trade-in program.



Comments     Threshold


This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

Probably be scrapped
By djc208 on 3/28/2008 7:55:15 AM , Rating: 2
The sad part is these returned movies will probably end up being destroyed rather than selling them.

So no cheap HD-DVDs for us and more crap in our landfills.




RE: Probably be scrapped
By Marvlarv on 3/28/2008 8:00:08 AM , Rating: 2
I think the materials that is used in the hd dvd should be reused as other stuff, I currently know how to do that but I am sure someone will find out


RE: Probably be scrapped
By 16nm on 3/28/2008 9:39:31 AM , Rating: 5
I agree completely. I have seen some movies of recent that would make great high definition drink coasters.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By BMFPitt on 3/28/2008 8:15:52 AM , Rating: 3
Considering most of their titles were priced at $30, it's no wonder they didn't move anywhere for 30% off... I went in once a week or so waiting for the "real" sale that will never come. I don't get why they'd rather pay to ship them back than sell some to me for $10-15.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By Spivonious on 3/28/2008 10:10:38 AM , Rating: 2
If they bought them for $15 a disc, then they lose nothing by sending them back. If they sold them for $10, they'd lose $5 a disc.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By Oregonian2 on 3/28/2008 1:52:11 PM , Rating: 2
So... maybe they will show up in the $5 bin at Kroger or K-Mart....


RE: Probably be scrapped
By Gul Westfale on 3/28/2008 2:01:13 PM , Rating: 1
i bought the devil's rejects on UMD for 6 bucks at the local futureshop (owned by best buy) a year ago. wonder why they didn't have a similar sale now?


RE: Probably be scrapped
By therealnickdanger on 3/28/2008 2:06:55 PM , Rating: 2
Can't really compare them. In the case of UMD, Sony's distributor may have not "recalled" the discs and instead offered Best Buy a "rebate" or a discount off their next batch order of Blu-Ray discs or DVDs. There could be any number of reasons why then and not now.

BTW, you paid real money for a UMD?


RE: Probably be scrapped
By AlphaVirus on 3/28/2008 2:20:33 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
I don't get why they'd rather pay to ship them back

There is probably a clause in the manufactures contract thats states

"If we discontinue manufacture of HDDVD's, we will supply a RGM (returned good materials)"
Which basically means they cover shipping costs. Its a really simple procedure that certain contracts hold.

But of course this all depends on the manufacturer.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By eye smite on 3/28/2008 8:20:58 AM , Rating: 2
Looking at these numbers and how long HD-DVD was out there, it doesn't appear it was really being addopted by people. I'm betting blu ray will be the same way, slow slow adoption. A standard dvd has excellent video quality over vhs and it dirt cheap. For blu ray, you need a new player and a tv that will display the disc so as to take advantage of that HD, and most people are happy with what they have and don't want to fork out the money on new equipment. I love my $39 dvd player that plays divx discs. Hehe, why would I upgrade.......


RE: Probably be scrapped
By therealnickdanger on 3/28/2008 9:13:25 AM , Rating: 2
You have to remember that HD-DVD and Blu-Ray were fighting eachother, so the competition confused a lot of people. The masses CAN see the difference, but they weren't willing to spend $$$ on something that might be obsolete within a year.

There's a few conditions that are going to help overall adoption to high-def from this point forward:

1080p is finally... "final". Most manufacturers have switched to producing only 1080p panels, be it LCD, PDP, LCoS, DLP. HDMI 1.3, like 1080p, is finally standard on most new devices.

Blu-Ray won. With only one high-def format to buy, early adopters are no longer split and there are no more mixed messages. We are already seeing accellerated adoption of BD.
http://www.dailytech.com/Bluray+Disc+Hits+Nine+Mil...

Blu-Ray players and movies will continue coming down in price.

DVD is great, but its sales started to drop in 2007 and will likely continue, especially as BD ramps up.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By therealnickdanger on 3/28/2008 9:25:27 AM , Rating: 2
quote:
1080p is finally... "final". Most manufacturers have switched to producing only 1080p panels, be it LCD, PDP, LCoS, DLP. HDMI 1.3, like 1080p, is finally standard on most new devices.

EDIT:

1080p is finally... "final". Most manufacturers have switched to producing 1080p panels, be it LCD, PDP, LCoS, DLP. HDMI 1.3, like 1080p, is finally standard on most new devices.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By mtoday7 on 3/28/2008 9:49:54 AM , Rating: 2
Nothing is ever "final" with technology. Eventually, a new ("better") format will come out.

1080P is not the end all resolution, since many people believe the next big thing is 4K.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By therealnickdanger on 3/28/2008 10:02:50 AM , Rating: 2
That's why I typed "final" in quotes. 1080p is the final, mature ATSC/HDTV standard - not the FINAL be all, end all technology. I shouldn't even have to explain this.

4K and UHDTV are no where near ready for prime-time, not for adoption and certainly not with price. 1080p will be around for a long time (10 years at least). Talk to 99% of shoppers at Wal-Mart and Best Buy and ask them what they think of 4K, they won't know what you're talking about. I was going to say 100%, but there's always a chance that someone from DT will be there. :P


RE: Probably be scrapped
By Oroka on 3/28/2008 10:38:04 AM , Rating: 2
And what is at the top of the electronic wish list the last few years... esp last year? LCD HD Televisions. I wanted a PS3 but didn't bother cause I didn't have a HDTV. When I finally got my 52" HDTV, the next week I went and got a PS3.

Right now, IMO, it is not HD that is the big thing, but BIG TVs, but people get HD with that. DVDs took years to overtake VHS, 5-6 years IIRC (I used video store shelf space as my gauge). Give BR-DVD some time, it will catch on.


RE: Probably be scrapped
By BMFPitt on 3/28/2008 12:22:13 PM , Rating: 3
The fact that we're in a recession probably isn't helping the adoption rate much, either.


50% off HD-DVD discs is still to high!
By theapparition on 3/28/2008 8:07:59 AM , Rating: 3
Especially now!

From the beginning, I've been very critical of HD-DVD prices. One of the strong selling points of HD-DVD was that it could be made on existing disc lines with virtually no infrastructure upgrades. Then why where they priced 2X DVD cost?
I know the answer is: "but they bring more value, they're HD". Not good enough. If your strongest selling point is that the price of the discs should be the same as DVD's, than that's what they should have priced them at. Failure in this respect, was (IMHO) the single biggest reason the format failed.

Oh well. My 3 HD-DVD players will live on next to my BR counterparts, as they work great at upconverting (XA2 is awesome). I think I have more BR discs than HD now, so time to move on. At least I'm getting a $50 card from Best Buy.




RE: 50% off HD-DVD discs is still to high!
By Staples on 3/28/2008 9:39:18 AM , Rating: 2
This is something that the fanboys always argued. I could have told you that these savings would not be passed on the the consumer. This is the way it is with just about everything.


RE: 50% off HD-DVD discs is still to high!
By TheDoc9 on 3/28/2008 11:13:31 AM , Rating: 2
The other thing is that its just a transitional format compared to BD. 30GB discs, lower bandwidth during movies and more fragile discs in comparison to 50 GB of space, higher bandwidth and the hard anti-scratch coating on BD's.

In any case they would have NEVER priced them much lower than BD discs because that's the closest competitor. A rule in American business, and now most business around the world is that you price at the absolute highest the market will tolerate. That's why a pack of organic meat at whole foods costs 3x more than regular at your average shop. If they don't sell it all it doesn't matter, all they have to do is sell one or two packs and the entire box pays for itself. Priced lower they have to sell more for the box to pay for itself. It's logical, but as we see with HD-DVD it's not smart.


By theapparition on 3/28/2008 12:45:12 PM , Rating: 1
quote:
The other thing is that its just a transitional format compared to BD. 30GB discs, lower bandwidth during movies and more fragile discs in comparison to 50 GB of space, higher bandwidth and the hard anti-scratch coating on BD's.

Yet for all Blr-rays technical specs, also came rushed to market incompatibliites, incomplete feature spec, more intrusive DRM and almost no movies mastered to date had noticeable quality improvements. The scratch coating was not near as big an issue on HD-DVD's, so it was never included.

Again, I know that's why they priced it such, but in the long run, we can see that it wasn't wise.


Oh well
By FluxCap on 3/28/2008 8:50:39 AM , Rating: 2
This is a bad move, end up destroying most of these when they could have had a fire sale. I would gladly pay $5 to $7 for most titles. Another reason to avoid Best Buy.