The Maker photograph

The Maker

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Initial release USA
DirectorsChristopher Kezelos
Composers Paul Halley
ScreenplayChristopher Kezelos
ProducersChristopher Kezelos
Christine Kezelos
Story byChristopher Kezelos
Ziad Jamal
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2192397
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About The Maker


Children making AI-generated child abuse images, says charity

Children making AI-generated child abuse images, says charity
Nov 27,2023 10:21 am

... The BBC asked The Maker of the bot for comment but they refused to provide a response...

AI boss Sam Altman ousted by OpenAI board

AI boss Sam Altman ousted by OpenAI board
Nov 17,2023 4:51 pm

... The Maker of the ChatGPT bot, OpenAI was behind a wave of excitement about artificial intelligence...

Death row: The secret hunt for lethal drugs used in US executions

Death row: The secret hunt for lethal drugs used in US executions
Oct 21,2023 2:51 am

... You watch enough of them, you can just tell immediately they were gone, " But his job took an unexpected turn in 2010, when Hospira, The Maker of the drug sodium thiopental, stopped production in the US due to an unspecified issue with obtaining raw materials...

The hunt for a new way to tackle clothing waste

The hunt for a new way to tackle clothing waste
Oct 8,2023 10:20 pm

... " Jean Hegedus, head of sustainability at Lycra, The Maker of the stretchy man-made spandex fabric of the same brand name, is well aware of the problems...

Unity engine: Among Us and Slay the Spire makers join criticism

Unity engine: Among Us and Slay the Spire makers join criticism
Sep 14,2023 11:21 am

... Innersloth, The Maker of Among Us, said it would have to " delay content and features our players actually want" to bring the game to a new engine...

Great British Sewing Bee judge's bid to restart Welsh underwear making

Great British Sewing Bee judge's bid to restart Welsh underwear making
Sep 10,2023 9:21 pm

... When, in 2001, Gossard, The Maker of Wonderbra, closed its factory in Pontllanfraith, Caerphilly county, a member of staff bought the machinery, moved it to another factory in New Tredegar and set up AJM, a small production with 60 staff...

Europe fires: How Canadair pilots battle the Mediterranean blazes

Europe fires: How Canadair pilots battle the Mediterranean blazes
Jul 30,2023 12:31 am

... By 2015, they had gone out of production, with The Maker blaming a lack of orders...

Microsoft-Activision: US regulator to appeal against $69bn gaming deal ruling

Microsoft-Activision: US regulator to appeal against $69bn gaming deal ruling
Jul 13,2023 2:40 am

... The FTC has alleged that the deal would hurt gamers and reduce competition by giving Microsoft, The Maker of the Xbox, power to deny rivals access to Activision s games...

The hunt for a new way to tackle clothing waste

Jun 23,2023 2:51 am

By Jane WakefieldTechnology reporter

Earlier this year, a satellite photo of A Mountain of discarded clothes in Chile's Atacama Desert went viral.

Clearly visible from space, it Once Again raised questions about The amount of waste The Fashion industry is creating, and what we can do about it.

While natural fibres such as cotton and wool will decompose, most manmade fibres, such as polyester and nylon, are not currently biodegradable. They will instead remain in landfills, or where they have been dumped, for decades or even hundreds of years.

However, a US-based scientific organisation is continuing work to find a Natural Way of getting waste polyester and nylon to quickly decompose.

" One of The approaches that We Are looking at is how you break down these complicated materials, and in a way that actually gets rid of The toxic effects of dyes and coating, " says Beth Rattner, The Executive Director of The Montana-based Biomimicry Institute . " Using biological materials, whether that be enzymes or bacteria, to create New Materials . "

She adds that The aim is to " take The existing mountains of clothing waste and turn them Into Something that's biocompatible".

The Biomimicry Institute 's project - dubbed Design for Decomposition - will choose tech partners later this year, and report back in 2024.

Ms Rattner says that The new processes it is exploring can not only help break down existing fabrics in more planet-friendly ways, but could also in future form The basis of new innovative materials.

" Instead of dyes you could use The structure of The Fibre itself, The same for water repellency, rather than coating it, or to make wrinkle-free fabrics. "

While The term " fast fashion" was originally coined to refer to The short length of time clothes took from going from design stage to shop, it has come to mean endless consumption of cheap clothes.

According to The UK's Ellen Macarthur Foundation , which campaigns for more recycling, every second there are enough garments Thrown Away to fill a rubbish truck, with less than 1% recycled into new clothes.

It means, says Jules Lennon, leader of its fashion programme, that " today's fashion system is broken".

" More clothes are being made than ever before, yet We Are using them less, " she adds. " The Fashion industry is responsible for more annual Greenhouse Gas emissions than all international flights and maritime shipping combined.

" It is also a significant contributor to Biodiversity Loss due to soil degradation and waterway pollution caused by raw material production methods and intensive washing and dyeing processes. "

Jean Hegedus, head of sustainability at Lycra, The Maker of The stretchy man-made spandex fabric of The same brand name, is well aware of The problems.

" It's estimated that about eight to 10% of all carbon emissions come from The textile and apparel industry, so we know that we have to change, " she tells The Bbc .

Change for US-based Lycra means finding a natural replacement for The polyester that makes up The majority of its material. Polyester, like nylon, is derived from petroleum.

" We found that that if just one component, which makes up 70% of The total Fibre , could be swapped from a petroleum-based Fibre to a renewable one, it would reduce The Firm 's carbon footprint by 44%, " says Ms Hegedus.

Lycra's journey to find this new raw material began in The US state of Iowa, where a company called Qore was working with farmers to create a new fabric made out of sweetcorn, dubbed Qira.

" The Core product is really interesting, " says Ms Hegedus. " It's made from what we call 'industrial dead corn'. So it's not like sweetcorn that's used for human consumption. It's specifically grown for things like materials, or to go into paper, or for Animal Feed . "

Lycra is now building a large wind-powered factory in Iowa to make its material using Qira instead of polyester. This is due to start production next year, and Lycra wants to come from The new corn-based Fibre .

is a series exploring how technological innovation is set to shape The new emerging economic landscape.

Ms Hegedus says The switch will make its material 10% more expensive to manufacture, a cost that it will share with its clothing firm customers. She adds that most " are very positive" about The Change .

Lycra says that The use of Qira has no negative impact on The functionality or comfort of its products. However, The First version of The corn-based Lycra will not be recyclable, but The Firm says it is " working on" that problem.

The manufacture of clothing using natural materials not previously associated with textile production is a growing sector.

Take US firm MycoWorks, which produces leather-like material from mushroom mycelium (The Roots of The Fungi ). Its first large-scale manufacturing facility is due to open in South Carolina at The End of The year, and aims to produce several million square feet of its material, known as Reishi, annually.

Meanwhile, companies such as UK-based Faber Futures are exploring The use of a soil-dwelling bacteria called streptomyces coelicolor. It has The potential to revolutionise The textile dyeing process, because it produces a rainbow of pigments as part of its Normal Life cycle, from vibrant blues and reds to subtle yellows.

In Finland, a company called Spinnova turns wood pulp into clothing fabric. It breaks down The pulp into micro-scale fibres which it turns into a cotton-like thread.

With customers including H& M and Adidas, earlier this year it opened a factory in Jyvaskyla, western Finland, with The aim of manufacturing one million tons of Fibre annually by 2033. The Factory is carbon-neutral - The only by-product is heat which is pumped back into The Local heating system.

Spinnova's fibres can be recycled and re-spun, but The Firm 's interim CEO Ben Selby acknowledges, that for this type of " circular textile loop" to work, brands and customers will need to change.

" The whole industry needs to start to better at collecting back old garments that can then be recycled, " he says.

Numerous fashion retailers now offer " takeback" schemes - you can return Old Clothes that they will recycle. However, which tracked 21 returned items from 10 fashion brands, found that three-quarters were either destroyed, left in warehouses, or exported thousands of miles to Africa to form new unwanted clothes mountains.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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