It would be interesting to see how many of those 14% have it hooked up correctly, or even have anything HD compatible hooked up to their HDTV at all.
That's not a comment on the average intelligence. I need two hands to count the number of "tech savvy" friends who phoned me to ask why there 360 wasn't kicking out in HD despite me reminding them beforehand to "flick the switch at the back over to HDTV because *everyone* forgets.
For sure, if you're buying a brand new TV this year, it's most likely it'll be HDTV compatible but most people expect their TV's to last 10 years. I'm not sure "very quickly" is a phrase I'd use when talking about HDTV adoption.
IMO, the point is moot as the importance of Blu-Ray with regards to PS3 sales is overstated.
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It would be interesting to see how many of those 14% have it hooked up correctly, or even have anything HD compatible hooked up to their HDTV at all.
That's not a comment on the average intelligence. I need two hands to count the number of "tech savvy" friends who phoned me to ask why there 360 wasn't kicking out in HD despite me reminding them beforehand to "flick the switch at the back over to HDTV because *everyone* forgets.
For sure, if you're buying a brand new TV this year, it's most likely it'll be HDTV compatible but most people expect their TV's to last 10 years. I'm not sure "very quickly" is a phrase I'd use when talking about HDTV adoption.
IMO, the point is moot as the importance of Blu-Ray with regards to PS3 sales is overstated.