PROVIDING INTERNET OR COMPUTER NETWORK

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
BUYER BROKER ASD GLOBAL INC. 221 Main Street, #460 San Francisco CA 94105 providing Internet or computer network integration of finance, sales, purchasing, industrial plant design, 3D piping and process plant viewing, project management, construction management and manufacturing actions for business entities; computer network access for corporate purchasing departments for single website access to and publishing to multiple vendors' workflow definition, requests for proposals, purchase orders, payments; Internet based inventory control, procurement, trading hubs, enterprise application integration, and application service provision; Internet based services for purchasing goods and services needed for manufacture and delivery of product goods and services, tracking and scheduling, and spending and supplier analysis;
INTELLIGENT PROCUREMENT MANAGER AAD GLOBAL INC. 221 Main Street, #460 San Francisco CA 94105 providing Internet or computer network integration of finance, sales, purchasing, industrial plant design, 3D piping and process plant viewing, project management construction management and manufacturing actions for business entities; computer network access for corporate purchasing departments for single website access to multiple vendors products; enterprise resource planning, supply chain management, decision support systems via the Internet; Internet based inventory control, procurement, trading hubs, enterprise application integration, and application service provision; Internet based services for offering industrial plant control over purchases of goods and services needed for manufacture and delivery of product goods and services; technical consulting services for enterprise resource planning, supply chain management, decision support systems via the Internet;
 

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

   
Technical Examples
  1. A novel network architecture that integrates the functions of an internet protocol (IP) router into a network processing unit (NPU) that resides in a host computer's chipset such that the host computer's resources are perceived as separate network appliances. The NPU appears logically separate from the host computer even though, in one embodiment, it is sharing the same chip.