San Francisco Chronicle

GoPro unveils camera drone

- By Jing Cao and Selina Wang

GoPro Inc. unveiled its long-anticipate­d drone, adding a new dimension to the action-and-adventure film-making it has become famous for through tiny, cube-shaped cameras, and sparking a rally for the company’s flagging stock.

The Karma drone, priced at $799, fits into a small, included backpack, and features a detachable camera stabilizer as well as a game-style controller with a display to show the live feed from the drone’s camera. GoPro had planned to release the drone earlier, but delayed its debut until Monday in part to make sure the camera stabilizer worked well, CEO Nick Woodman said in a conference call after an event to show off the drone in Squaw Valley.

“We felt the consumer deserved that we take a little bit of extra time to nail it,” Woodman said. “In terms of strategy and fitting Karma into

GoPro’s existing product line and value propositio­n for consumers, it’s got to be versatile and got to work in all the ways a standalone GoPro camera works.” That’s why the drone also comes with a separate hand grip that can attach to the stabilizer, he said.

The San Mateo company also also introduced the latest iterations in its Hero camera line, the $399 Hero5 Black and the smaller Hero5 Session at $299. Both cameras are waterproof.

After the drone’s release was postponed this year and the Hero 4 entered the market late and overpriced last year, GoPro is in need of a hit. Its stock has tumbled 17 percent in the past year through last week and is down almost 85 percent from its October 2014 high. It rose 2.3 percent Monday to $15.31.

Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Jitendra Waral said the Karma launch will be a “pivotal event for the company,” and a chance for GoPro to renew sales growth by “jump-starting” a nascent category through its brand strength and dedicated user base of about 10 million people.

GoPro could also disrupt the drone market that’s so far been dominated by Chinese manufactur­er SZ DJI Technology Co. and countless upstarts that are flooding the market with cheap drones.

Karma has potential to gain a decent audience if it’s priced under $1,000 and has all the capabiliti­es of existing drones in that price category, according to Colin Snow, founder of Skylogic Research. At the most basic level, the drone needs to have a 4K camera, sense and avoidance capabiliti­es so that the drone doesn’t crash into things, camera stabilizat­ion and the ability to take excellent footage, he said.

“Will GoPro grab market share from companies that have been out there for a while like DJI? It depends upon what level of sophistica­tion it comes in at and how well it does when it initially releases,” Snow said. “Almost no drone we’ve ever seen comes out without a host of problems.”

Both of the cameras announced Monday can shoot with video resolution as sharp as 4K at 30 frames per second and can be mounted on the drone. The cameras can upload photos and videos while charging to GoPro’s cloud subscripti­on service that allows users to store, edit and share their content. New apps for smartphone­s and desktops are an important part of the company’s strategy to provide consumers with the hardware and software needed to craft video stories, Woodman said in an interview on Bloomberg Television.

“It’s not just enough to enable the capture of great moments,” he said. “GoPro is not just a camera company anymore.”

 ?? Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images ?? GoPro CEO Nick Woodman displays the foldable Karma drone during a press event. The Karma, priced at $799, fits into a small, included backpack.
Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images GoPro CEO Nick Woodman displays the foldable Karma drone during a press event. The Karma, priced at $799, fits into a small, included backpack.

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