PAY PER HOST

Brand Owner Address Description
PAYPERHOST PAYPERHOST 3001 S Ocean Dr. APT 749 Hollywood FL 33019 PAY PER HOST;Color is not claimed as a feature of the mark.;Application service provider (ASP), namely, hosting computer software applications of others; Application service provider, namely, hosting, managing, developing, analyzing, and maintaining applications, software, and web sites, of others in the fields of advertising and marketing; Application service provider, namely, hosting, managing, developing, analyzing, and maintaining applications, software, and web sites, of others in the fields of healthcare, benefits programs, employee productivity, risk management; Application service provider, namely, hosting, managing, developing, and maintaining applications, software, and web sites, in the fields of personal productivity, wireless communication, mobile information access, and remote data management for wireless delivery of content to handheld computers, laptops and mobile electronic devices; Computer services, namely, cloud hosting provider services; Computer services, namely, hosting an interactive web site that allows users to upload, store and maintain automotive repair records, manage online records of services performed on their vehicles, and receive automated service reminders, safety alerts, recall alerts, and special discount offers; Computer services, namely, hosting on-line interactive public calendars that allow multiple participants to share event schedules and facility reservations; Computer services, namely, hosting on-line web facilities for others for organizing and conducting online meetings, gatherings, and interactive discussions; Computer services, namely, interactive hosting services which allow the users to publish and share their own content and images on-line; Consulting services in the field of hosting computer software applications; Design, creation, hosting and maintenance of internet sites for third parties; Design, creation, hosting, maintenance of websites for others; Designing, creating, maintaining and hosting online retail and electronic commerce websites for others; Developing and hosting a server on a global computer network for the purpose of facilitating e-commerce via such a server; Hosting an online community website featuring shared communications between community members interested in personal and small business computer information security; Hosting internet sites for others; Hosting of digital content on the Internet; Hosting of web sites; Hosting the digital audio and video content of others for the purpose of enabling hotel, inn, and other lodging establishment guests to download the content on a pay per view basis; Hosting the software, websites and other computer applications of others on a virtual private server; Hosting the web sites of others; Hosting the web sites of others on a computer server for a global computer network; Hosting websites on the Internet; Internet-based application service provider, namely, hosting, managing, developing, analyzing, and maintaining the code, applications, and software for web sites of others; Maintenance of websites and hosting on-line web facilities for others; Platform as a service (PAAS) featuring computer software platforms for webhosting resellers; Providing an online website for creating and hosting micro websites for businesses; Providing virtual computer systems and virtual computer environments through cloud computing; Server hosting; Technical support services, namely, remote administration and management of in-house and hosted datacenter devices, databases and software applications; Web site hosting services;
 

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

   
Technical Examples
  1. Disclosed is a method for one computing device (the "provider") to provide peripheral services to another device (the "host"). A user directly runs the host. The host accesses the provider as if the provider were a set of peripheral devices attached to the host. In this way, the host and provider become, in effect, one device with the combined capabilities of both devices. The provider switches between two modes: In standalone mode, the provider acts as an individual device; upon switching to auxiliary mode, the provider provides peripheral services to the host but can still run applications and present an input/output interface to its own user. When the peripheral device provided to the host is a display screen, the host can map the provided screen into the host's own video memory, thus hiding implementation details from applications that use the screens. One device can simultaneously act as provider and host.