Online Video Expected to Overtake DVD, Blu-ray Viewing this Year

For U.S. viewers to reach that 3.4 billion figure, IHS is banking on an explosion in online video consumption. As Telecompetitor reports, Americans watched only 1.4 billion movies from online sources last year, so online consumption would have to increase by more than 135 percent to reach that goal.
But that kind of growth seems possible considering how busy the online video business has become. Of course, IHS sees Netflix as a huge driver for online video consumption, with users “snacking and sampling” on the service's deep catalog.
Netflix also has a glut of new competitors, such as Amazon and traditional pay TV providers that are also trying to get into the streaming video business. Comcast has announced its own service called Streampix, and Verizon has teamed up with Redbox on an upcoming Netflix rival. Dish Network already offers a streaming video service for its subscribers under the Blockbuster brand. HBO Go has also been expanding beyond the PC to iOS devices, Roku and, most recently, the Xbox 360.

Even if online movie viewing overtakes optical media this year, fans of optical media should still have plenty of time before their format of choice becomes obsolete. As of last fall, Blu-ray sales were still growing, and although DVD sales are plummeting, they still account for billions in revenue for Hollywood. Movie studios are in no rush to stop selling discs, even as a future dominated by online viewing looms.
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