

So for us that produce media this means that it is far more profitable to concentrate on the 91% of households that have a DVD player, versus the 25% of house holds that have a Blue Ray player.

On the other hand 91% of houses have a DVD player which is actually up 4% on the previous year (. In the US though, as of the end of 2011 61% of house holds had a HD TV and only 25% of houses had a Blu Ray player. As of the end of March 2012 while there were 60million TVs in the UK, there is only a 42% uptake of HD TV ( ), I didn't see the stats on Blu-Ray players in the UK. Sure they were around but they cost $20,000 so who on earth had one. Before that it was like when plasma TVs were introduced. Adobe Encore CS6 (64-Bit) Adobe Illustrator CS6 (64-Bit) Adobe Media Encoder CS6 (64-Bit) Adobe Photoshop CS6 Extended (64-Bit) Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 (64-Bit) Adobe SpeedGrade CS6 (64-Bit) Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 4. HD technology only came out widely about 5 or so years ago. Only a portion of people have HD TVs and only a far smaller portion of them have blu ray players. The uptake of new technology into the general public is quite slow. Yes, I film ice skating videos and we output to DVD because that is what most people have.
