SOFTWARE WATER MANAGEMENT

Brand Owner Address Description
H2OIST PARSONS CORPORATION 5875 Trinity Parkway Suite 300 Centreville VA 20120 Software for water management in the field of water quality monitoring and assessment, watershed-based stormwater planning and design, stormwater utility development and implementation, combined sewer overflow (CSO) analysis, flood control, sedimentation, and river engineering, FEMA flood insurance studies, hydraulic modeling and design, ecosystem restoration and geomorphic assessment, dam safety analysis, groundwater development and management, aquifer storage and recovery (ASR), conjunctive management planning, water rights and water availability modeling, reservoir operations analysis, in-stream flow assessments and wetlands mitigation banking;H TWO O IST;Business services, namely, water management services and reservoir operations analysis;Hydraulic and hydrologic engineering services, namely, water quality monitoring and assessment, watershed-based stormwater planning an design, combined sewer overflow (CSO) analysis, flood control, sedimentation and river engineering, hydraulic modeling and design, ecosystem restoration and geomorphic assessment, dam safety analysis, groundwater aquifer storage and recovery (ASR), water rights and water availability modeling;
 

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

   
Technical Examples
  1. The disclosed invention is a software license management system (SLMS) utilizing a web-based interactive database to automate a software management process (SWMP) for managing software assets, measuring compliance requirements, and tracking/reporting status as necessary to assure proficiency and adherence to implementation requirements of the software management process. The SWMP is a process consisting of five different phases. The five steps of the SWMP involve identification of various solution alternatives, acquisition, deployment, maintenance and software retirement. The SWMP establishes high-level software management process to avoid litigation and penalties, maximize software asset utilization through tighter inventory control, and capitalize on the software procurement process.