Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Home Media

Polar Frog Ready to Burn CSS at Kiosks

"Over the short-term, I don't expect much impact on physical home media products," said Kurt Scherf, VP and principle analyst with Parks Associates. "I expect that the download-to-burn kiosks are going to be used more by retailers as a way to phase out those bargain-DVD bins you typically see near the Walgreen's check-out line. I'd expect that you'll see older titles more on these kiosks than the latest Hollywood release.

"It's going to take some time for the studios and the kiosk companies to experiment with the type of content they plan to make available through the download-to-burn efforts." However, he added, that title count is Polar Frog's biggest asset, comparing it to the 500 or so rental DVDs available from Redbox, or the 7,000 to 10,000 DVDs on the shelves at Blockbuster. "Once the studios get real data back on use, on how revenues compare to the distribution costs that they're saving, etc., I think you'll see more come on board, assuming the results are favorable," he said."

From the article, "Polar Frog Ready to Burn CSS at Kiosks" by Chris Tribbey

Previously In The News

Parks Associates: Network-Connected TVs To Triple In 2010

The number of Internet-connected TVs used as networked devices in American homes will nearly triple in 2010, from 2.4 million in 2009 to more than 7 million, according to research presented Aug. 27...

Will 2011 See Stop to Cord-cutting?

Research firm Parks Associates estimates that 7.6% of consumers are considering canceling their pay TV service for online or other video sources in 2011. “Will those consumers come back to pay TV?...

Report: 3 Million Households to Buy Connected TV for Christmas

Research firm Parks Associates said the projection suggests another nail in the coffin for brick-and-mortar video stores. Despite the tally, just 38% of households plan to make a CE purchase by...

Experts Mull State of Connected Devices

With nearly 20% of American broadband households paying an average of $5 a month to watch TV or movie content on their PCs, and 5% paying an average of $6.50 a month to do the same via a video game...