Research group iSuppli says that Blu-ray drives are failing badly on PCs, predicting that even by 2013, only 16% of PCs will have Blu-ray drives installed.
Reasons for such poor penetration of Blu-ray drives could be that people are simply happy with their DVD writer drives, and happy with the storage capacity of your average DVD, and those requiring high capacity can simply look towards USB drives and external HDDs. Another reason could be because the main benefits of Blu-ray movies, the high resolution video and audio, are not as evident on small PC monitors, many of which are not 1080p capable (and let's not even get into most people's cheap PC speaker sets). And as a format that's predominantly movie based, much like the early days of DVD when hardly anything (other than movies) were published on the DVD format, there's really not much use for it on the PC, not until Blu-ray writer and media become more accessible.
But even so, you cannot beat the value and convenience of a USB flash drive. USB flash drives are rewritable, do not require special hardware to read or write, are not prone to scratching or damage and can fit in your pocket. These are all things that Blu-ray rewritable discs can never achieve. And looking at the price, a 32 GB drive at $60. A 25 GB BD-RE (rewritable) currently costs $11. Which seems to favour Blu-ray, but if you add in the cost of the hardware (cheapest is $110), you'll have to burn quite a few Blu-ray discs to justify the spending. And then for people to read the discs, they have to have a Blu-ray drive too, which rules out all netbooks, most notebooks and most PCs - making the discs rather useless.
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Reasons for such poor penetration of Blu-ray drives could be that people are simply happy with their DVD writer drives, and happy with the storage capacity of your average DVD, and those requiring high capacity can simply look towards USB drives and external HDDs. Another reason could be because the main benefits of Blu-ray movies, the high resolution video and audio, are not as evident on small PC monitors, many of which are not 1080p capable (and let's not even get into most people's cheap PC speaker sets). And as a format that's predominantly movie based, much like the early days of DVD when hardly anything (other than movies) were published on the DVD format, there's really not much use for it on the PC, not until Blu-ray writer and media become more accessible.
But even so, you cannot beat the value and convenience of a USB flash drive. USB flash drives are rewritable, do not require special hardware to read or write, are not prone to scratching or damage and can fit in your pocket. These are all things that Blu-ray rewritable discs can never achieve. And looking at the price, a 32 GB drive at $60. A 25 GB BD-RE (rewritable) currently costs $11. Which seems to favour Blu-ray, but if you add in the cost of the hardware (cheapest is $110), you'll have to burn quite a few Blu-ray discs to justify the spending. And then for people to read the discs, they have to have a Blu-ray drive too, which rules out all netbooks, most notebooks and most PCs - making the discs rather useless.
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