Chicago Sun-Times

GOPRO HAS A NEW APP TO FIX ITS SHARING ISSUE

Wireless transfer directly to smartphone­s could mean more cool videos get online

- Jefferson Graham @ jeffersong­raham USA TODAY

The app makes GoPro “an extension of my phone to help me capture better footage” and will result in more GoPro clips on social sites. GoPro founder Nick Woodman

A new app from GoPro finally answers the question: What can all those action camera users do with their footage?

For the first time, they won’t have to go home, pull out the memory card, insert it into the computer, and then figure out what to make of those clips of surfing, skateboard­ing, skiing and the like. Now the updated GoPro app will wirelessly pull the footage directly from the GoPro camera to the smartphone.

GoPro founder Nick Woodman calls the app the “biggest leap forward” for the struggling company since the invention of the GoPro camera in 2002. The GoPro app and the new QuikStorie­s app are the solution “our customers have been dreaming about for years.”

The GoPro app has been updated for automatic transfers, while the older Quik instant video maker has been revamped to work hand- in- hand with the GoPro app to accept the footage and create instant movies.

Before you run to the Apple or Google app store to download the free apps, a quick caveat: The feature only works with the latest camera, the Hero5 or Hero5 Session, introduced last fall.

Owners of the Hero4 and earlier editions will still have to import their footage the old- fashioned way. In an interview with USA TODAY, Woodman said older models couldn’t be updated because they had slower upload speeds.

The app stands to finally put GoPro into social media in a way it hasn’t been because of the time and effort it took us-

ers to import clips.

While GoPro is a mainstay of YouTube, Facebook and Instagram with its own channel, most videos submitted by users on these channels come from smartphone­s because of the instant upload features.

Now the app makes GoPro “an extension of my phone to help me capture better footage,” Woodman said, and will result in more GoPro clips on social sites.

TalkingTec­h has been using the apps for several days, and they truly are a game changer, in the ease of moving footage from the camera to the smartphone. We’ve played with similar attempts from Canon, Sony, Nikon and other camera manufactur­ers to move footage to the smartphone that were slow, bulky and so tough to use that we just imported the old way — by inserting the memory card into a computer.

With the GoPro app, you pair the camera to the smartphone via the GoPro Wi- Fi and, once paired, shoot some footage ( or photos) on the Hero5. Then, with the camera on and phone in your hand, open the app and wait to see the signal that it recognizes the new footage. Smartphone download comes next.

This could take some time. I shot a 13minute time lapse of a sunset the other night that took 27 minutes to import. And that will eat up your smartphone and GoPro batteries.

Beyond the footage transfer, QuikStory is positioned as the app to make automatic, quick edits. You select the images, and the GoPro editor gets to work, with automatic slideshows or videos, in 30 different editing styles.

The good news is if you have the time, you can alter the order of the photos and videos, switch the music for something of your own, or go without music. You can also add text and effects like slow motion. And you don’t have to only shoot GoPro video. Any footage or photo on your phone will work with the app.

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