We went to the show on Friday, and came away with very mixed feelings about the whole thing.
Generally we found the amount of AV very, very dissapointing, this is the first time we have been in several years, and I would have to say that this element has declined to the extent that there is now only about 30% of the number of AV type products than previous. I think we only saw 2 projector manufacturers overall, Epson and Sim 2, previous years have seen up to about 10 brands. this was very much the case across the board, where there was once a lot of AV, now there is hardly any.
The Anthem demo was, on the whole, one of the main highlights for us, and will certainly make us consider the brand when next updating, it was excellent.
We had hoped to see more screens (ie LED/Plasma/OLED etc) than we were able to, and I have to say that the What HiFi demo of 4k and OLED was actually pretty awful, it might have worked if you were sat at the front, but 3/4 the way back you could hardly see anything (mismatched screen sizes didn't help), and although they kept saying the blacks on OLED were much better, from where we were the 4k Looked much better. The whole demo room was the wrong way round for the majority of viewers, and would have been much better rotated 90degrees. As for the sound, their claim of 15k plus worth of speakers and amp, well all I can say is there was no rear chanel info, and very distorted front! This was amongst the most disappointing of demos on the day.
One really worrying concern for the industry, must be the age profile of potential buyers, as the average age at the show must have been well over 40 with very few youngsters on the day we went. Also with such a poor AV selection on view, where does one go to see a decent selection, if this is the UK's biggest show, then there is clearly a massive decline in the market now. Which as a potential buyer is very concerning. Clearly (as I have become more and more aware of) the youngsters don't care about quality, only instant access and quantity, all for either free or nearly free.
The manufacturers must take some of the blame for this, as TV and Blu Ray player prices have become far to cheap to be sustainable, it is no wonder Pioneer got out of the game, and Panasonic/Sony are in the process of doing so to an extent. In the Blu-Ray market you are generally hard pressed to find a product that costs more than £250 and with 40inch TV's readily availble for £300 upwards it is no wonder the industry has issues. Only a decade or so ago we were all not to unhappy to pay around £1,000 for a 32 inch TV. This supermarket approach to pricing has created a market where quality no longer seems to matter in many areas, only price.
And do we all really need so many platforms for catch up material anyway?