MARK CONSIST BRAIN

Brand Owner Address Description
BRAINON Ingenics AG SCHILLERSTRASSE 1/15 ULM 89077 Germany The mark consist of brain in black and On in light green.;Warehouse planning, namely, planning of storage of goods in warehouses;Building construction, namely, building construction supervision and construction of manufacturing facilities;BRAIN ON;The color(s) black and light green is/are claimed as a feature of the mark.;Business consultancy, namely, advice in the fields of cost-cutting measures for existing productions, and the overall optimization of business processes; business consultancy, namely, advice in the fields of planning measures to improve efficiency in businesses, development of work organization models, group work, payment systems, work time models, workplace design and time studies; business process re-engineering services, namely, economic-organizational design and optimization of business processes and controlling costs in the field of construction; business process re-engineering services, namely, economic-organizational consultancy in the fields of logistics, namely, logistics planning, planning of physical and informational logistics processes, material provision planning; business consultancy services in the field of logistics processes for the purpose of logistic planning, namely, by simulation and visualization of logistics processes for the purpose of logistics planning;Engineering services in the field of planning with regard to the construction of new factory installations with production equipment, including structural planning, layout planning and construction drafting, integrated technical project management, and consultation therefor;
 

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

   
Technical Examples
  1. Techniques are provided for determining the efficient conjunction of Boolean variables drawn from an and-or forest of choices. The techniques determine two contexts to conjoin, where the contexts consist of choices drawn from an and-or forest of choices. The choices in the first context are marked with a first mark, along with all of their antecedent choices. The choices in the second context are marked with a second mark, along with all of their antecedent choices. The techniques determine and-nodes in the and-or forest having the first mark from a first dependent or-node and the second mark from a second dependent node. The dependent or-nodes are refined and then partitioned into classes based on the presence of the first mark and the second mark, the first mark only, the second mark only, and neither mark. A cross-product of the partitions for each node is determined and the resultant combinations are grouped based on the presence of both the first and second marks, the presence of the first mark only, the presence of the second mark only and presence of neither mark. A new or-node having choices reflecting the combinations having both marks, the first mark only, the second mark only and neither mark is determined. The new or-node represents a transformed and-or forest of choices that is in free-choice form. The first and second nodes in the forest of choices are replaced with an or-node having choices based on the first and second mark. The conjunction of contexts is then determined based on the choice having both the first and second marks.