Blu-Ray is doing good in 2009
Blu-ray: Strong Start for 2009
By Brennon Slattery, PC World
A burst of sales plus a wave of new players and recorders at CES equal a strong start for Blu-ray.

Disc sales have tripled in the past year, according to The Digital Entertainment Group, an organization made up of movie studios and electronics manufacturers that track the industry. Blu-ray sold 28.6 million discs in the fourth quarter of 2008, and there are 10.7 million Blu-ray players currently in the United States.
The biggest seller was "The Dark Knight," the No. 2 highest grossing motion picture of all time. "The Dark Knight"is the first Blu-ray disc to sell more than one million copies.
These strong sales were also reported by the British Video Association in a post-Christmas report.

With the bounty of new Blu-ray devices splashing into the market, 2009 looks to be a great year for the format, and may catapult it out of relative obscurity and into the mass market.

With the bounty of new Blu-ray devices splashing into the market, 2009 looks to be a great year for the format, and may catapult it out of relative obscurity and into the mass market.
LG announced the LG BD370 and LG BD390 Network Blu-ray Disc players, which feature on-demand streaming content from Netflix, CinemaNow and YouTube. Samsung released a sexy new model, The BD-P3600, also featuring streaming content and 1GB of internal flash memory, and a hyper-connected Blu-ray home theater setup. Panasonic produced the portable Blu-ray player, and Sharp built Blu-ray into its new LCD TVs.
Meanwhile, prices on connected Blu-ray players have dropped, which should pique consumer's interest in the format.


After a dubious year of sales and recognition, Blu-ray seems to have finally hit its stride. You can expect 2009 to be a stellar year for disc releases, sales and new products supporting the winner of the high-def war. And remember: The more popular a product becomes, the more likely prices will drop even further.


- A single-layer Blu-ray disc, which is roughly the same size as a DVD, can hold up to 27 GB of data -- that's more than two hours of high-definition video or about 13 hours of standard video.
- A double-layer Blu-ray disc can store up to 50 GB, enough to hold about 4.5 hours of high-definition video or more than 20 hours of standard video. And there are even plans in the works to develop a disc with twice that amount of storage.