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Table 5 : Business Licensing Services

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2007
"... In PAGE 9: ... From a survey of government agencies conducted by the authors in 2004, licensing services feature prominently among the several services provided by government, especially to businesses [12]. A representative list is depicted in Table5 . License-related services include: application for a new license, renewal of an expired license, re-instating a revoked license, tracking the progress of a license application, and booking an appointment with a licensing agency for information on how to submit an application.... In PAGE 10: ...Table 5 : Business Licensing Services The process depicted in Figure 1 is a simplified workflow for the 25 licensing services in Table5 . A detailed description of different process steps is provided in [1].... ..."

Table 30. Institutional linkage License

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1999
"... In PAGE 13: ...able 29. Substantial sources of income from IP commercialization (other than royalties) ...................................... 24 Table30 .... In PAGE 38: ... This survey shows that Canadian universities and their affiliated research hospitals have created a total of 471 spin-off companies to commercialize their technologies. Table30 shows the distribution. Table 30.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 2: Parks Canada Framework Before and After Agency Status

in Exploring Organizational Commitment Following Radical Change: A Case Study Within The Parks Canada Agency
by Dawn Elizabeth Culverson, Dawn Elizabeth Culverson
"... In PAGE 13: ....8 Table2 : Parks Canada Framework Before and After Agency Status .... In PAGE 24: ... 1). Table2 outlines some of the fundamental changes that have taken place as a result of Agency status. One of the most important characteristics attributed to the new Parks Canada Agency is that it continued to embrace its long-standing mandate as well as the Guiding Principles and Operational Policies that were developed in 1994.... ..."

Table 7 FCC License Geographies

in Preliminary Draft -- Comments and Suggestions Welcomed Version 1.5
by Douglas A. Galbi, Senior Economist, Revolutionary Ideas For
"... In PAGE 54: ...To define sub-national licenses, the FCC uses geographies based on independent socio- economic analysis. Table7 shows the geographies the FCC has used for area licenses. Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) are a well-established geography that the Office of Management and Budget, a separate federal executive agency, defines.... In PAGE 54: ... EAs are defined to encompass, as much as possible, the workplace and residence of their populations.4 As Table7 shows, the FCC has defined additional aggregations of these geographies. The FCC has also added some elements to these geographies to cover distinctive areas.... In PAGE 55: ... In the US, license boundaries generally have significance outside of radio regulation. All the geographies used in systematic licensing plans ( Table7 ) are partitions of counties. That means the boundaries of their elements are county boundaries.... ..."

Table 4-2. Environmental approvals and consultations for HNP license renewal.a Agency Authority Requirement Remarks

in TABLE OF CONTENTS
by Edwin I. Hatch, Nuclear Plant
"... In PAGE 91: ...1.1 General Environmental protection licenses and permits from Federal and State authorities for current HNP operations are listed in Table4 -1. HNP has no regionally or locally issued environmental permits or other environmental protection approvals or entitlements.... In PAGE 91: ... HNP has no regionally or locally issued environmental permits or other environmental protection approvals or entitlements. Table4 -2 identifies environmental approvals and consultation associated with HNP license renewal. As indicated, SNC anticipates that relatively few such approvals are required.... ..."

Table 27 provides detailed information on new licenses executed in 1999 and total active licenses. One breakdown in the table is the number of exclusive versus non-exclusive licenses. For example, an exclusive license would prohibit the university from licensing the same technology to additional companies.

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1999
"... In PAGE 13: ...able 26. 1999 licenses: hospitals and universities.................................................................................................... 22 Table27 .... In PAGE 37: ...at. No. 88F0006XIB No. 01 Table27 . Detailed license data: universities Exclusive or sole license Non- exclusive or multiple license Unclassi- fied (as to exclusive or non- exclusive) Total a) New licenses executed with Canadian licensees that were: i) Sponsors of research contracts or participants in collaborative activities ( quot;Sponsors quot;) 36 3 - 39 ii) Not involved in generating the technology licensed ( quot;Non-sponsors) 28 14 - 42 iii) Unclassified (as to sponsor or non-sponsor) 15 13 - 28 iv) Total new licenses with Canadian licensees (a.... In PAGE 37: ... Table 12 showed that for 14/84 universities and 8/19 hospitals, the policy is that the sponsor has the first rights to license the IP. Table27 shows that of 109 new licenses with Canadian licensees, 39 were with sponsors of research contracts/participants in collaborative activities, 42 were with non-sponsors (parties not involved in generating the technology licensed) and the remaining 28 were unclassified. For confidentiality reasons, detailed information on hospital licenses is not available.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 27. Detailed license data: universities

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1999
"... In PAGE 13: ...able 26. 1999 licenses: hospitals and universities.................................................................................................... 22 Table27 .... In PAGE 36: ... Table 26. 1999 licenses: hospitals and universities Number of new licenses Number of active licenses Number of institutions reporting active licenses Hospitals 14 56 5 Universities 218 1,109 28 Total 232 1,165 33 Table27 provides detailed information on new licenses executed in 1999 and total active licenses. One breakdown in the table is the number of exclusive versus non-exclusive licenses.... In PAGE 37: ... Table 12 showed that for 14/84 universities and 8/19 hospitals, the policy is that the sponsor has the first rights to license the IP. Table27 shows that of 109 new licenses with Canadian licensees, 39 were with sponsors of research contracts/participants in collaborative activities, 42 were with non-sponsors (parties not involved in generating the technology licensed) and the remaining 28 were unclassified. For confidentiality reasons, detailed information on hospital licenses is not available.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 2: Comparison of available ORBs, where $ indicates commercial license.

in A CORBA commodity grid kit
by Gregor von Laszewski, Manish Parashar, Snigdha Verma, Jarek Gawor, Kate Keahey, Nell Rehn
"... In PAGE 19: ...ffice of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, U.S. Department of Energy, under Contract W-31-109-Eng-38; by the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency under contract N66001-96-C-8523, and by the NASA Information Power Grid program. Appendix Table2 summarizes an evaluation of available ORBs. The evaluation based on some basic features relevant in the development of the CORBA CoG Kit.... ..."

Table 1. Main categories of copyrightable and not copyrightable items

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2003
"... In PAGE 3: ... When the three basic requirements of fixation, originality and expression are met, the law provides a highly broad protection. Table1 summarizes the range of copyrightable works. Table 1.... ..."
Cited by 30

Table 1. Main categories of copyrightable and not copyrightable items

in Security of Digital Entertainment Content From Creation to Consumption
by Ahmet Eskicioglu John, John Town, Edward J. Delp 2003
"... In PAGE 3: ... When the three basic requirements of fixation, originality and expression are met, the law provides a highly broad protection. Table1 summarizes the range of copyrightable works. Table 1.... ..."
Cited by 30
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