
Standing in front of a huge HD TV and watching good helmet cam footage taken from the handlebars of a mountain bike or the tip of a surfboard is a great way to waste 10 or 12 minutes. GoPro had a bunch of TVs setup at the recent OR show where they were showing minute-long loops of footage shot with their upcoming HD GoPro camera. It was easy and fun to watch entirely because the athletes were polished. And now that their HD camera will sell for about $300, we’ll all be forced to huddle around computers at work or flatscreen TVs in friends’ homes to watch endless footage of their Sunday rides. I imagine it being kind of like when video cameras first became affordable and people taped things like Thanksgiving dinner, which they’d then watch after dinner. Affordable HD helmet cams will bring us startling clarity to our crashes and long, slow climbs.
The new GoPro will be indistinguishable from the previous model from the outside, but the guts will let you shoot in HD 1080p, 960p, or 720p, whatever the hell that means. They’re also planning on adding battery backup options and a wrist-mounted remote with an LCD screen to edit and look at footage on the fly.