PEER SUPPORT SERVICES

Brand Owner Address Description
CERTIFIED PARENT SUPPORT PROVIDER THE NATIONAL FEDERATION OF FAMILIES FOR CHILDREN'S MENTAL HEALTH National Federation of Families for Children's Mental Health 15800 Crabbs Branch Way Suite #300 Rockville MD 20855 Peer support services, namely, providing teaching, mentoring, and role modeling for parents and other family members of children who experience mental health, intellectual, or emotional challenges;The mark consists of a square which has three connecting circles inside of it. One circle contains the image of two stylized and differently sized humans. One circle contains the image of three stylized and differently sized humans. The final circle contains the image of four stylized and differently sized humans. Adjacent to the square are two stacked rectangles. The top rectangle contains the words Certified Parent Support Provider. The bottom rectangle contains the words The National Federation of Families for Children's Mental Health.;Color is not claimed as a feature of the mark.;The certification mark, as used, or intended to be used, by persons authorized by the certifier, certifies, or is intended to certify, that the authorized person has demonstrated the required knowledge and willingness to comply with the certifier's Code of Ethics for Parent Support Providers.;CERTIFIED PARENT SUPPORT PROVIDER THE NATIONAL FEDERATION OF FAMILIES FOR CHILDREN'S MENTAL HEALTH;
 

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.