TELEVISION PROGRAMS FEATURING EDUCATION

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
CHILDREN'S TELEVISION WORKSHOP SESAME WORKSHOP One Lincoln Plaza New York NY 10023 television programs featuring education and entertainment for children, parents and families;video recordings featuring a full line of education and entertainment for children, parents and families;CHILDRENS TELEVISION WORKSHOP;as to CHILDREN'S TELEVISION;CHILDREN'S TELEVISION;
DK MY FIRST DIGITAL BOARD BOOK Dorling Kindersley Limited One Embassy Gardens 8 Viaduct Gardens London SW117BW television programs featuring education and entertainment for children;The mark consists of the letters DK, in red, within the representation of an open book; the word my, with the letter m displayed in the color magenta and the letter y displayed in the color light blue; the word first with the letter f displayed in the color rust, the letter i displayed in the color blue, with a yellow star forming the dot of the i, the letter r displayed in the color purple, the letter s displayed in the color red, and the letter t displayed in the color green; and the term digital board book displayed in black letters.;DVD's, videotapes and videocassettes featuring education and entertainment for children;DORLING KINDERLEY MY FIRST DIGITAL BOARD BOOK;The applicant claims color as a feature of the mark, namely, red, magenta, light blue, rust, blue, yellow, purple, green and black .;
 

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

   
Technical Examples
  1. This invention is a method of allocating bandwidth for a television program delivery system. This method selects specific programs from a plurality of programs, allocates the selected programs to a segment of bandwidth, and continues to allocate the programs until all the programs are allocated or all of the available bandwidth is allocated. The programs may be selected based on a variety of different factors or combination of factors. The selected programs may also be prioritized so that higher priority programs are distributed before lower priority programs in case there is not enough bandwidth to transmit all of the programs. This invention allows a television program delivery system to prioritize a large number of television programs and distribute these programs based on their priority levels. The invention also permits a television program delivery system to dynamically allocate bandwidth over time or based on marketing information, such as consumer demand.