

My first dvd recorder unit was the iLO DVDR04, purchased in mid February,Ģ005. Well, first of all, I purchased all my dvd recorders (all THREE) at It's nice to record an entry of my success I lost this topic,Īnd now found it again. On the boxes, so I don't know how you all tell what brand it is. It's a Lite-on 16x but there is no Model No stamped Because I also want to get my hands on a DL burner too, and BJ's And, I just want to put that drea idea away ta rest.īut, I wonder. or one hr show, and actually enjoy it even more than if I had recorded it If anything, I want one because I could record to highest quality, a 1/2 hr On a no-name brand, just to see for myself (finally) what all this hype is $278 dollars, it was too much for me to soon. I did like the idea of the Harddrive model, but (last time I was there) at Today, I'll have to visit my nearest W.Mart and see on models and prices To much now, (the price of these units, brand-name-wise) because everyone I'm not too sure that its going to matter all

The cheapist price I've seen on DVD Rec was Wal-Mart for $149īut I forget the name brand. If retail prices fall to US$99, DVD recorders will increasingly replace DVD players, and global demand may reach 20-25 million DVD recorders this year. Japan-based Techno Systems Research recently downgraded its estimate of global sales of DVD recorders in 2004 to 10 million units.
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The target OEM makers in Taiwan are all interested in landing large orders from Wal-Mart, but are mulling over how to minimize production costs since their OEM quotations for DVD recorders currently stand at US$110-120. Wal-Mart plans to stimulate demand for DVD recorders by offering a retail price as low as US$99 – the so-called magic price – for entry-level models in the second or third quarter of 2005 and therefore has to keep OEM prices down to a correspondingly low level of US$75-80, the makers noted. In the US and European markets, entry-level DVD recorders did not sell well in the peak 2004 Christmas retail period, even with a drop in retail prices of around US$139-149. The target makers include Lite-On IT, BenQ, Quanta Storage, Mustek Systems and Protop Innotech. Wal-Mart wants the players priced at US$75-80, and all makers involved in the bidding are currently evaluating the feasibility of bidding on an OEM contract. At the end of 2004, US retail giant Wal-Mart talked with leading manufacturers in Taiwan concerning OEM production of entry-level DVD recorders.
