BUSINESS NETWORKING PEER PEER LEARNING

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
PIE Profitable Ideas, Inc. Suite A 815 Manley Road Bozeman MT 59715 Business networking of peer-to-peer learning groups of high net worth individuals; Business networking; Business research; Conducting business and market research surveys; Business development services; Business development consulting services; New business venture development and formation consulting services; Dissemination of advertising, scheduling and managing of training courses and programs for others via a global computer network; all of the above excluding consulting services, training courses, and programs for the compatibility of present and potential employees with each other and with job responsibilities; all of the above expressly excluding specific tailoring of topics within the field of human resources development, human resources organization, and human resources management;
PROFITABLE IDEAS Profitable Ideas, Inc. Suite A 815 Manley Road Bozeman MT 59715 Business networking of peer-to-peer learning groups of high net worth individuals; Business networking; Business research; Conducting business and market research surveys; Business development services; Business development consulting services; New business venture development and formation consulting services; Dissemination of advertising, scheduling and managing of training courses and programs for others via a global computer network;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. System and method for the dynamic and transparent migration of services in a peer-to-peer networking environment. Member peers in a peer group using a peer-to-peer platform may cooperate to provide redundant instances of services to member peers. Dynamic migration of a service may be performed by unbinding one or more peer-to-peer platform pipes from a peer hosting an instance of the service and binding the pipes to another peer hosting a different instance of the service. Using pipes, services may transparently failover from one physical peer endpoint to another in order to mask a service or peer failure, or to access a newly published instance of a service. Thus, a collection of peers may provide a high level of fault tolerance, where, for example, a new peer at a different location may replace a crashed peer, with the new peer taking over the existing pipe to keep the communication going.