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[2.6] Will DVD replace laserdisc?
When this question was first entered in the FAQ
in 1996, before DVD was available, many people wondered if DVD would
replace laserdisc, the 12-inch optical disc format that had been
around since 1978. Some argued that DVD would fail and its adherents
would come groveling back to laserdisc. After DVD was released,
it soon became clear that it had doomed laserdisc to quick obscurity.
Pioneer Entertainment, the long-time champion of laserdisc, abandoned
laserdisc production in the U.S. in June of 1999. This was sooner
than even Pioneer thought possible (in September 1998, Pioneer's
president Kaneo Ito said the company expected laserdisc products
to be in the market for another one-and-a-half to two years), although
Pioneer did continue to release small runs in Japan until 2001.
Laserdisc still fills niches in education, training,
and video installations, but it's fading even there. Existing laserdisc
players and discs will be around for a while, though essentially
no new discs are being produced. There were about 18,000 laserdisc
titles in the US and a total of over 35,000 titles worldwide that
could be played on over 7 million laserdisc players. (See Julien
Wilk's Laserdisc Database for
the most extensive list of titles.) It took DVD several years to
reach this level, and there are still rare titles available on laserdisc
but not on DVD. One bright point is that laserdiscs can now be had
at bargain prices.
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