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Google sues BT in patent battle

Written By Unknown on Senin, 18 Februari 2013 | 08.10

14 February 2013 Last updated at 07:24 ET

Google is suing BT, claiming the British telecoms group has infringed a number of its technologies.

The search giant has launched a series of legal actions against the London-based firm in California, claiming four of its patents have been violated, and has also filed a separate case in the UK.

BT had been expecting such action after it launched its own case against Google in 2011.

That dispute has yet to be resolved.

"We have always seen litigation as a last resort, and we work hard to avoid lawsuits," said a spokeswoman for Google.

"But BT has brought several meritless patent claims against Google and our customers - and they've also been arming patent trolls."

The term "patent troll" describes firms that acquire patents so that they can later extract settlements from companies on infringement claims.

In 2012, New Jersey-based intellectual property owner Suffolk Technologies sued Google and US internet service provider AOL over two patents it had acquired from BT.

In addition, Steelhead Licensing - another firm which owns patents but does not produce products of its own - has filed a case against 14 handset makers and mobile networks, including Google's Motorola unit, claiming infringement of a wireless technology which used to be owned by BT.

A spokesman for the British firm said it did not comment on pending litigation.

Google first

Google has struck back with claims that BT has infringed a method to allow PCs to use an internet-based telephone system based on a patent originally filed by Fujitsu.

And it says BT failed to license a system used to let computer servers prioritise data - an IBM invention now owned by the search firm.

Patent consultant Florian Mueller said this was the first clear case of Google suing another company over its patents.

Previous cases involving Motorola were filed ahead of Google buying the Razr handset maker.

BT and Google are next set to meet in court in Delaware in July for a mediation hearing about the 2011 case.


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Police hold 11 over ransomware scam

14 February 2013 Last updated at 08:21 ET

A complex cybercrime network spreading ransomware designed to extort money has been shut down, police have said.

Spanish authorities, working with the European Union's law enforcement agency, Europol, arrested 11 people, from Russia, Georgia and Ukraine.

Software planted on targeted machines accused the user of having viewed illegal content, such as images showing child sex abuse, Europol said.

It then told the user to pay a "fine" before continuing to use the machine.

A Europol statement said: "By dressing the ransomware up to look as if it comes from a law enforcement agency, cybercriminals convince the victim to pay the 'fine' of 100 euros [$130; £85] through two types of payment gateways - virtual and anonymous - as a penalty for the alleged offence.

"The criminals then go on to steal data and information from the victim's computer.

"Since the virus was detected in May 2011, there have been more than 1,200 reported cases just in Spain, and the number of victims could be much higher."

'One million euros'

Investigators from Europol's European Cybercrime Centre - which launched last month - said the network had infected "tens of thousands" of computers worldwide.

Estimated profits had been in the range of one million euros per year, the statement said. And the virus had been first discovered in May 2011.

The gang had been receiving the money in a variety of ways - including using virtual currency such as Bitcoin, Europol said.

They were also alleged to have used cash machines in Spain to withdraw money with compromised credit cards - one of which had been used to take out 26,000 euros prior to the suspects' arrest.

Europol believe the head of the operation was a 27-year-old Russian man who had been in charge of the "creation, development and international distribution of the various versions of the malware".

"He was arrested in the United Arab Emirates and is awaiting extradition to Spain," the statement said.

Six Russians, two Ukrainians and two Georgians were also arrested.


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Self-driving car given UK test run

14 February 2013 Last updated at 13:12 ET By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News
Self-driving car

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The BBC's Richard Westcott tests out the self-driving car

A car that is able to drive itself on familiar routes has been shown off at an event at Oxford University.

The technology uses lasers and small cameras to memorise regular journeys like the commute or the school run.

The engineers and researchers behind the project are aiming to produce a low-cost system that "takes the strain" off drivers.

Other companies, such as Google, have also been testing driverless vehicle technology.

The search giant has pushed for law changes in California to allow its car to be tried out in real-life situations.

The Oxford RobotCar UK project is seeking to do the same in the UK, said Prof Paul Newman from Oxford University's department of engineering science.

"We're working with the Department of Transport to get some miles on the road in the UK," said Prof Newman, who is working alongside machine learning specialist Dr Ingmar Posner.

Gaining 'experiences'

Until the car can hit the streets, the team is testing it out in a specially-made environment at Begbroke Science Park in Oxfordshire.

Continue reading the main story

Frankly, it is a bit disconcerting being driven around by a robotic chauffeur, but then I remember thinking the same thing when I first used cruise control on a motorway.

It's amazing how quickly you adjust to things. Within five minutes I'd got used to the wheel turning on its own, and I wasn't remotely concerned when someone walked out in front of us (it was a tightly controlled safety experiment before anyone emails in, and the car did stop in plenty of time).

Fully autonomous cars won't appear in showrooms overnight. But it seems inevitable we will be handing over more of the driving to computers as the years roll by, and this Oxford University system could well be the next step.

There are barriers of course. Makers will have to prove they are safe. Then they'll have to convince the public. And there's the sticky question of who's liable if there's a crash.

Still, most car crashes are down to the human at the wheel. Plenty of people believe robotic cars could save thousands of lives in the future.

"It's not like a racetrack - it's a light industrial site with roads and road markings," Prof Newman told the BBC.

"Crucial for us, it can show our navigation and control system working.

"It's not depending on GPS, digging up the roads or anything like that - it's just the vehicles knowing where they are because they recognise their surroundings."

The technology allows the car to "take over" when driving on routes it has already travelled.

"The key word for us is that the car gains 'experiences'," Prof Newman explained.

"The car is driven by a human, and it builds a 3D model of its environment."

When it goes on the same journey again, an iPad built into the dashboard gives a prompt to the driver - offering to let the computer "take the wheel".

"Touching the screen then switches to 'auto drive' where the robotic system takes over, Prof Newman added.

"At any time, a tap on the brake pedal will return control to the human driver."

Spinning lasers

At the moment, the complete system costs around £5,000 - but Prof Newman hopes that future models will bring the price of the technology down to as low as £100.

Autonomous technology is being tested by several car manufacturers and technology companies.

Simple self-driving tasks, such as cars that can park themselves, are already in use across the industry.

The Holy Grail is a fully-autonomous vehicle that is location-aware, safe and affordable.

Google has been testing its car for several years, with the company boasting of 300,000 computer-driven miles without an accident.

While at an earlier stage of development, Oxford University's car has significant key differences to Google's offering, Prof Newman said.

"Well if you look at it, we don't need a 3D laser spinning on the roof that's really expensive - so that's one thing straight away. I think our car has a lower profile."

He added: "Our approach is made possible because of advances in 3D laser mapping that enable an affordable car-based robotic system to rapidly build up a detailed picture of its surroundings.

"Because our cities don't change very quickly, robotic vehicles will know and look out for familiar structures as they pass by so that they can ask a human driver 'I know this route, do you want me to drive?'"

Prof Newman applauded Google's efforts in innovating in the space - but was buoyant about the role British expertise could have in the industry.

"This is all UK intellectual property, getting into the [driverless car] race.

"I would be astounded if we don't see this kind of technology in cars within 15 years. That is going to be huge."


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Blue-screen effects pioneer dies

14 February 2013 Last updated at 17:34 ET By Leo Kelion Technology reporter

The visual effects industry has paid tribute to Petro Vlahos - the pioneer of blue- and green-screen systems.

The techniques allow filmmakers to superimpose actors and other objects against separately filmed backgrounds.

He developed the procedure for 1959's Ben-Hur and then went on to win an Oscar in 1964 after creating a related process for Disney's Mary Poppins.

The death of the 96-year-old was announced by the company he founded, Ultimatte.

His innovations continue to be used and developed by the television, film, computer games and advertising industries.

"Our industry has lost a giant," Everett Burrell, senior visual effects supervisor at Los Angeles-based studio Look Effects. told the BBC.

"It's hard to even conceive of how we would do what we do without the amazing number of processes and techniques he pioneered. All visual effects professionals and movie fans owe him a debt of gratitude."

Look Effects has built on Mr Vlahos' achievements to create work for the movies Avatar, The Life of Pi and the upcoming Superman film, Man of Steel.

Six-month idea

Mr Vlahos was not the first to use a blue-screens - earlier versions of the technique can be seen in films including The Thief of Bagdad, and The Ten Commandments.

But he is credited with developing a way to use it that minimised some objects appearing to have a strange looking glow as a side-effect.

He called his invention the colour-difference travelling matte scheme.

Like pre-existing blue-screen techniques it involves filming a scene against an aquamarine blue-coloured background.

This is used to generate a matte - which is transparent wherever the blue-colour features on the original film, and opaque elsewhere. This can then be used to superimpose a separately filmed scene or visual effects to create a composite.

Mr Vlahos's breakthrough was to create a complicated laboratory process which involved separating the blue, green and red parts of each frame before combining them back together in a certain order.

He also noted in a patent filing that the process allowed the blue-screen procedure to cope with glassware, cigarette smoke, blowing hair and motion blur which had all caused problems for earlier efforts.

Movie studio MGM had commissioned him to invent it. Mr Vlahos later noted that it had taken him six months of thought to come up with the idea, much of it spent staring out onto Hollywood Boulevard.

He later created a "black box" - which he called Ultimatte - to handle the process, first for film and then electronically for video.

Acting alongside cartoons

Mr Vlahos was also awarded a patent for his work on a related technique called sodium vapour illumination, which he developed for Disney.

This involved filming the actors' scenes against a white backdrop using sodium-powered lamps which caused a yellow glow to bounce off the background.

The camera featured two film stocks shot simultaneously, and a prism on its lens.

The prism split the yellow sodium light away from the other colours, sending it to a black-and-white-based film stock which was then used to create the matte.

Meanwhile, the other film stock recorded the scenes in colour without the sodium's yellow cast being visible.

The advantage was that this created an even cleaner effect than Mr Vlahos' original blue-screen efforts.

Disney used Mr Vlahos's version of the technique to make Mary Poppins, Bedknobs and Broomsticks, and Pete's Dragon - among other movies - letting its actors appear to interact with cartoons.

Alfred Hitchcock also borrowed the technique for The Birds, and Warren Beatty later used it in Dick Tracy.

However, it has since fallen out of favour because the equipment involved is more expensive and cumbersome to operate, and the quality of blue- and green-screen techniques has improved.

'Extraordinary significance'

Mr Vlahos ultimately racked up more than 35 movie-related patents and went on to co-found his company, Ultimatte Corp, with his son Paul in 1976.

It now focuses its efforts on making AdvantEdge, a compositing software plug-in.

Robin Shenfield, chief executive of visual effects studio The Mill, recalls meeting Petro Vlahos several times in the 1980s and says he came across as "unassuming", despite his many achievements.

"I remember him being rather quiet," he told the BBC.

"He was a scientist - he wasn't a showman, although I think he rather liked the involvement of his technology in the world of entertainment. Ultimatte had a bit of razzmatazz about it as a company."

The Mill has since used blue- and green-screen technologies to create visual effects for the film Gladiator, the BBC's Dr Who television series and director Guy Ritchie's Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 trailer among other works.

"It's the absolute building block of all the visual effects that you see in television and movies," added Mr Shenfield.

"It's significance is extraordinary. Everything people like us and others are still built on that fundamental ability to take lots of elements from lots of places and seamlessly mesh them into a new convincing reality.

"Mr Petro - and his family - were pioneers in our industry for which he should be remembered."


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Blue Peter honours Apple's Jony Ive

15 February 2013 Last updated at 07:14 ET
Blue Peter Presenter Barney Harwood and Sir Jonathan Ive

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Watch presenter Barney Harwood present Sir Jonathan with the gold badge

The BBC's Blue Peter programme has honoured Apple's design chief Sir Jonathan Ive with its highest accolade - the gold Blue Peter badge.

The British executive helped create the iMac and iPhone and, in October, took responsibility for the look and feel of the firm's software user interfaces.

Blue Peter said he was an "inspiration to children around the world".

He will appear in a gadget-themed special broadcast on Saturday, offering advice to the viewers.

In the pre-filmed segment he reviewed designs sent in by children and recalled how he had enjoyed watching one of Blue Peter's past presenters reuse a detergent bottle to create a paintbrush holder.

"I loved the way there was just products that you thought were no longer useful, but reusing them," he said. "It was fantastic."

Blue Peter has only presented about 1,000 gold badges in its history,

Other recipients include footballer David Beckham and author JK Rowling.

Sir Jonathan, known as Jony, described the news as "absolutely incredible".

He also presented the show with his own version of the Blue Peter badge made out of solid aluminium, manufactured by Apple's equipment, using the programme's catchphrase: "Here's one that we made earlier".

The award adds to a series of honours.

In May, Sir Jonathan was knighted at Buckingham Palace for his services to design and enterprise.

In September, he brought his entire design team to London to celebrate winning the best brand and design studio of the previous 50 years prize at the Design and Art Direction (D&AD) awards.

App redesign?

October's management shake-up at Apple means a lot is now riding on his shoulders.

After the firm's previous iOS software chief was ousted, it was announced Sir Jonathan would provide "leadership and direction for human interface across the company" in addition to being its industrial design boss.

There had been criticism that the firm's iOS operating system - which powers its iPhones and iPads - was in need of an overhaul to help it fend off competition from Google's Android and other rivals.

According to new figures from research firm IDC, 159.8 million Android-powered smartphones were shipped worldwide between October and December 2012, marking an 88% year-on-year gain.

By contrast, IDC suggests that 47.8 million iPhone were shipped over the same period - an annual gain of 29.2%.

In its analysis of the data, the consultancy said "what stands out is how iOS's year-over-year growth has slowed compared to the overall market".

It has been widely speculated that Sir Jonathan might now shift the Apple's software away from its reliance on "skeuomorphic" textures and effects - in other words stop trying to make its apps look like their real-world equivalents.

This might see an end, for instance, to it showing stitched leather borders and torn paper in its Calendar app and lined yellow legal paper in its Notes product.

Sir Jonathan's hardware designs have been praised for having a more minimalist approach.

However, it is unclear whether he will have had enough time in his new post to make such changes to Apple's next iOS and Mac OS X system revisions which are expected later this year.

Blue Peter's gadget special will be broadcast in the UK on the CBBC channel at 10:00 GMT on Saturday 16 February.


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Valve opens Linux video game store

15 February 2013 Last updated at 09:21 ET

Software firm Valve has launched a Linux version of its Steam game store.

The games made available via the online Steam store are playable on the Ubuntu version of the Linux open-source operating system.

Through the store, Ubuntu users can get at almost 60 games including popular titles such as CounterStrike and Team Fortress 2.

The launch comes as Valve lays off about 10% of its staff including some who were working on hardware projects.

Open-source software gives users access to all its underlying programming code and stands in contrast to closed or proprietary software which locks such information away,

No discussion

Players can get access to the Steam store using an add-on application available via the Ubuntu software centre.

As well as games made by Valve, the Linux version of Steam also sells titles made by other companies.

They include Amnesia, FTL, Serious Sam 3 and World of Goo.

As it opened the Linux store, Valve also cut the prices of the PC and Mac versions of games available to Ubuntu users by up to 75%. The sale will run until 21 February.

Continue reading the main story

We're not going to discuss why anyone in particular is or isn't working here"

End Quote Valve boss Gabe Newell

David Pitkin, who works for Ubuntu developer Canonical, said he now expected "a growing number of game developers to include Ubuntu among their target platforms".

Currently, few game makers produce a version that can run on Linux or other open-source operating systems.

While almost 60 titles are available on Steam, the store sells more than 2,000 games that run on Windows.

The launch is important for Valve because Linux is expected to be the operating system for the console it is developing to allow Steam games to be played on TVs.

As the curtain was being lifted on the Linux store, Valve sacked about 30 members of staff including high-profile developer Jeri Ellsworth who was reportedly working on the hardware behind the company's console.

Valve boss Gabe Newell took the unusual step of issuing a statement about the lay-offs to curb speculation about what they would mean for the company's many projects.

He said the sackings did not mean it was cancelling any projects or changing its priorities.

"We're not going to discuss why anyone in particular is or isn't working here," he said.


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Facebook 'targeted by hackers'

15 February 2013 Last updated at 18:18 ET

Facebook has revealed it was the target of a "sophisticated attack" by hackers last month, but found no evidence any user data had been compromised.

The US-based social network said that the attack occurred when employees visited a mobile developer website "that was compromised".

Facebook said in a blog post that it was not the only company to have been attacked in this way.

More than one billion people use Facebook worldwide.

"Last month, Facebook security discovered that our systems had been targeted in a sophisticated attack," the California-based company said.

"The attack occurred when a handful of employees visited a mobile developer website that was compromised."

Malware was downloaded on to its employees' laptops, the firm said, adding: "As soon as we discovered the presence of the malware, we remediated all infected machines, informed law enforcement, and began a significant investigation that continues to this day."

"We have no evidence that Facebook user data was compromised in this attack," Facebook said in its blog post.

The firm went on to say that it was "not alone in this attack".

"It is clear that others were attacked and infiltrated recently as well. As one of the first companies to discover this malware, we immediately took steps to start sharing details about the infiltration with the other companies and entities that were affected," Facebook said.

This is the latest attack by apparently sophisticated hackers targeting high-profile sites.

Twitter said earlier this month that the theft of 250,000 users' passwords, as well as usernames, emails and other data, was "not the work of amateurs".

The New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal have all accused China of "persistently" hacking into their security systems - accusations China denies.


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Megaupload sequel to accept bitcoins

18 February 2013 Last updated at 05:34 ET

Web storage service Mega will now accept the virtual currency bitcoin, according to its founder Kim Dotcom.

The site is the sequel to his site Megaupload, shut down a year ago at the urging of the US government.

Mega follows social news site Reddit and blogging platform WordPress in accepting bitcoin payments.

Mr Dotcom, who awaits a hearing relating to criminal charges, in part, about pirated material on his original site, announced the move on Twitter.

"#Mega now accepts #BITCOIN via our newest reseller Bitvoucher: https://bitvoucher.co/ ," the founder posted on Saturday.

The virtual currency can be used to pay for extra storage space on the service.

Mega offers 50GB of free cloud storage, with the option to pay for extra storage ranging from 500GB to 4TB.

The exchange rate for one bitcoin currently stands at close to £17 ($26).

The cheapest package of 500GB costs €9.99 euros ($13.32; £8.61) per month - or half a bitcoin.

To pay in the internet currency, users need to access BitVoucher, the website of Mega's new reseller.

Criminal charges

Mega was launched in January, a year after Mr Dotcom - originally called Kim Schmitz - was arrested, and his original site Megaupload shut down.

It will be decided in March whether he should be extradited from New Zealand to the US to face charges relating to copyright theft.

Megaupload became one of the most popular websites on the web before it was shut down, but Mega is meant to be bigger, better and legally watertight.

The new site allows 50GB of free storage upon sign-up - more than twice the amount if the user is signed up for free accounts with Google, Apple, Microsoft and Dropbox put together.

It is a site advertised as being a place where lots of files can be stored securely and accessed by the user, from any computer.

The content is encrypted, so even staff at Mega need the user's key to unlock it. But the key can be shared and the files might not just be family photos or a home recording. And this is where infringing copyright could, once again, become a problem.

Bitcoins first appeared in 2009 and are closely linked to the global network of computers that supports the currency and its users.

Many people generate or "mine" the coins by participating in that network, and a growing number of web stores and online firms accept bitcoins as payment.


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Egypt in YouTube anti-Islam film row

18 February 2013 Last updated at 07:46 ET

Egypt's telecoms ministry has refused to block access to YouTube and has filed an appeal to reverse a court order asking it to do so.

Last week, a judge ordered a block on access to the site for 30 days for hosting of an anti-Islam film, Innocence of Muslims, in 2012. The film sparked anger across the Muslim world.

YouTube blocked access to the video in Egypt last September after widespread riots.

A rights group also filed an appeal.

The Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression in Egypt (AFTE) called the verdict "collective punishment of all YouTube and Google service users".

The group said: "Banning these websites will deprive internet users from the right of expressing themselves on those sites as well as depriving them of an important means of expression."

The country's telecoms ministry cited high technical costs when it said it could not block access to YouTube.

It added that could not legally monitor the content of social media websites.

Widespread protests

The 14-minute-long video, which was made in the US, was first uploaded to the video-sharing site in July last year.

In September, a version dubbed into Arabic appeared, and spread across the web, sparking widespread protests in the Middle East, North Africa and Sri Lanka, with some demonstrations turning into destructive and violent riots.

Four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stephens, were killed during an attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

Google, which owns YouTube, rejected a request from the White House to remove the film from the video-sharing site, but blocked access to it in Libya, Egypt, Indonesia, India and Saudi Arabia.

A Google spokesperson told the BBC that the company worked "hard to create a community everyone can enjoy and which also enables people to express different opinions.

"This can be a challenge because what's OK in one country may be offensive or illegal elsewhere.

"The authorities in Egypt have notified us of individual videos that they believe are illegal and, after a thorough review, we have blocked access to them on the Egyptian version of YouTube."


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Astronaut in Reddit chat from space

18 February 2013 Last updated at 10:28 ET

Canadian Chris Hadfield, who will assume command of the International Space Station (ISS) in March, took part in a web chat on Sunday - from space.

He appeared on social news site Reddit, typing on his laptop some 220 miles (354 km) above Earth during the site's "ask me anything" (AMA) session.

Last year, US President Barack Obama also participated in an AMA chat.

To "beam" his answers down, Mr Hadfield logged on via a satellite relay to a server in Houston, Texas.

"The purpose of all of this is to connect with you and allow you to experience a bit more directly what life is like living aboard an orbiting research vessel," wrote the astronaut.

The discussion drew more than 2,000 questions and comments.

Continue reading the main story

I feel like an adapted ape swinging through the jungle canopy... until I miss a handrail and crash into the wall"

End Quote Chris Hadfield Astronaut

The astronaut replied to queries ranging from describing the smell of space, saying that "airlock smells like ozone, or gunpowder", to clarifying how astronauts shaved when bits of hair floated all around them: "just wipe it on a cloth every time".

He said that he did not see the meteor that fell in Russia because the station was on the other side of the Earth, but added that small meteorites "burn up between ISS and the Earth every day.

"I watched a large meteorite burn up between me and Australia, and to think of that hypersonic dumb lump of rock randomly hurtling into us instead sent a shiver up my back," he wrote.

He said that sometimes occupants of the ISS "hear pings as tiny rocks hit our spaceship, and also the creaks and snaps of expanding metal as we go in and out of sunlight. The solar panels are full of tiny holes from the micro-meteorites."

'Good moustache'

One of the questions was about weightlessness, and Mr Hadfield wrote: "Simply fly - to push off and glide magically to the other end of the station. It makes me smile to myself, every time.

"I'm still learning! But sometimes now, I am graceful. I feel like an adapted ape swinging through the jungle canopy... until I miss a handrail and crash into the wall."

He also said that the launch - "all that power and acceleration" - was the biggest danger astronauts faced.

"Once we survive that, it's just a steady threat of radiation, meteorite impacts, and vehicle system failure like fire or ammonia breakthrough," he posted.

Describing how the world looked from space, Mr Hadfield wrote: "It looks like a carpet of countless tiny perfect unblinking lights in endless velvet, with the Milky Way as a glowing area of paler texture."

He said that Australia looked "coolest", calling the colours and textures of the Outback "severely artistic".

"The most beautiful to me are the Bahamas, the vast glowing reefs of every shade of blue that exists," he added.

Finally, when a Redditor asked: "If you discover intelligent life, who should play you in the movie?" Mr Hadfield said: "Someone with a good moustache."

Canadian commander

The current space mission is Chris Hadfield's third trip into orbit. His first was 17 years ago when he flew on the space shuttle Atlantis to the Mir space station.

In March, Mr Hadfield will become the second-ever non-Russian and non-American to lead an ISS crew. A European Space Agency astronaut, the Belgian Frank De Winne, was in command of the station in 2009.

Mr Hadfield was the first Canadian to undertake a spacewalk; and he was the first and only Canadian to board the Russian Mir space station.

He was also the first Canadian to operate his country's major contribution to the space shuttle - its robotic arm, or "Canadarm".


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