A DVD player for just £9 at ASDA
Last updated at 00:07am on 25.01.07
Asda's £9 DVD player
A DVD player is to go on sale for just £9, demonstrating that gadgets have now become as disposable as an old shirt and cheaper than a night at the cinema.
Asda is to offer the player, which costs less than a DVD blockbuster film, as it steps up the pressure on traditional electrical stores.
The arrival of the £9 DVD player demonstrates how supermarkets are shaking up the high street.
Asda, which is part of the American Wal-mart empire, has launched a major move into home electricals, as have Tesco and Sainsbury's.
Around 80,000 of the Durabrand 1005 machines will hit the supermarket's stores.
The development is indicative of savage price cuts on gadgets, where prices are now so low that they can be thrown away and replaced.
One recent study found that the price of some gadgets have fallen by 74per cent in a decade so making them both affordable and essential to the lives of millions.
Mobile phones, MP3 players such as the iPod, DVD players, lap-top computers and flat panel TVs are now considered must-haves, rather than luxuries.
As recently as four years ago, DVD players were relatively rare.
The bulky boxes would cost more than £250, while most homes still had VHS tape players.
Now they are being sold for less than £10 alongside baked beans and loaves of bread.
The Asda £9 DVD player is also indicative of a shift in manufacturing to the Far East, where wages and other business costs are a fraction of those in the UK
The machine is made at a factory in China.
Asda insisted that working conditions and pay rates at the factory have been audited four times in the past year to ensure that ethical standards are in place.
Last week, the supermarket began offering a suit, made in Bangladesh, for just £19.
The compact Durabrand DVD player works as a portable entertainment system.
It also plays CDs and MP3 tracks, while it is so small that users can take it away and plug it into TV sets in holiday cottages or foreign hotels.
The internet bank Egg calculates that the price of audi-visual items has come down by a staggering 74 per cent, while the figure for general electrical goods is 27.2 per cent lower.
It estimates that Britons will spend £13 billion this year on electrical goods, with an average of some £273 per person.
It argues this has double the buying power it would have done in 1996.
Such is the pace of change that devices, such as mobile phones, are constantly being replaced by newer versions with extra "bells and whistles".
Consequently, the prices of the first wave of new gadgets, be they MP3 players such as the iPod or flat panel TVs, can fall very sharply as upgraded versions are launched.
This is currently being seen with the HD-Ready TVs, where one category of 720 line sets are now being replaced by new devices with 1080 lines and even greater clarity.
The low prices also supports the notion that today's high-spec gadget is not expected to last.
The policy of "built-in obsolence" means it is effectively disposable after a year or so.
Some mobile phone manufacturers are even offering cheap devices which are designed to be thrown away after a fixed period of calls or use.
Asda's Peter Pritchard said: "This is such a jaw-droppingly low price that customers might struggle to believe it, but we really are selling a DVD player for under a tenner."
"This is truly unbeatable value and puts our competitors in the shade – our message to customers is why pay more, when you don't have to."
Reader views (10)
with a dvd player that cheap who cares if it dies within a year....for the equivalent of a few drinks in a pub you go get a new one lol
- Michelle, hampshire, uk
I bought the original durabrand DVD player and it stopped working after 2 months! Not good enough for me I'm afraid! However I will buy this £9 one and if the same happens again I'm going to cause a storm!
- Maccy, London, England
I had my player for almost a year, but it went kaput. Power supply circuit was still working and getting warm, but no lights, no spinning of disk... nothing. I looked inside and reseated the various plugs and connectors, but still nothing, so I binned it.
Shame! The player was so small it sat on my TV nicely.
- Andy, Hampshire, England
I got this one's predecessor about two and a half to three years ago from Asda and it's just stopped working now. For the price I paid for it I feel like I got my money's worth and will be purchasing this one when it hits the supermarket. As long as it plays DVDs I'm happy, I'd rather replace it every few years for £9 than fork out nearer £50 for one.
- K Chesher, Southend, United Kingdom
Sounds like the ideal thing for my Mum, who's in a care home, so it could easily get broken, but I do have misgivings on ethical grounds.
- Rita Cavanagh, Orbost, Australia
My daughter has had one of these (or it's predecessor) for a couple of years, and it's been fine.
- A, Forfar, Scotland
This is part of a very worrying, and well established, trend towards disposability. In the good old days, when your TV broke, a man came around to fix it... now you'll most probably dump it at the tip and buy a new one if it's out of warranty.
I know that shipping, logistics and everything else sway everything to the replacement rather than repair option, but still, we're digging ourselves an early grave here, replacing disposable electronic gadgets in world where the majority still don't have clean water to drink.
I'm as much a part of the problem as anyone else - I buy this stuff and I consume/dispose in exactly the same way most Brits do...indeed, I even work in the technology industry... but aren't we reaching a point where we've really got to start to think about what we're doing?
- Dave M, Mansfield, United Kingdom
DVD player for under a tenner, great. Exploiting Asia and making the lives of many an Asian a living hell-hole, unforgivable.
I wouldn't buy one out of principle and I suggest you do the same.
- Mallchin, United Kingdom
DVD players have been available for less than $20 for years at places like Best Buy, Walmart (never been there myself), and especially online.
- Daniel, Tacoma, WA, USA
OK. An inexpensive DVD player is a great idea, but is it reliable?
How long can it be used before mechanical failure?
- S, NYC, USA
Afternoon:
14°c

An awesome and ridiculous film that leaves you thrilled beyond the point of your natural endurance




