TEMPO CURE

Brand Owner Address Description
TEMPOCURE ElmediX NV Esperantolaan 4 Leuven B-3001 Belgium TEMPO CURE;Medical equipment rental;Medical heating apparatus for use in cancer treatment; Devices and articles for medical purposes, namely, heating cushions and heating pads for medical purposes; Disposables for cancer treatment, namely, patient monitoring sensors, invasive and non-invasive temperature sensing catheters, sensors applicators and introducers being patient monitoring sensors, heating and cooling patches for medical purposes, stretchers for patient support during treatment, wearable heat flux sensors, wearable transducers for patient physiological monitoring during hyperthermia; Disposable articles for medical purposes, namely, patient monitoring sensors, invasive and non-invasive temperature sensing catheters, sensors applicators and introducers being patient monitoring sensors, heating and cooling patches for medical purposes, stretchers for patient support during treatment, wearable heat flux sensors for patient monitoring, wearable transducers for patient physiological monitoring during hyperthermia; Apparatus for the thermal treatment of cancer; Cooling patches for medical purposes; Heating Cushions and heating pads for medical purposes; invasive and non-invasive temperature sensing catheters for medical use;
 

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

   
Technical Examples
  1. A method and apparatus implement time compression and expansion of audio data, with dynamic tempo change during playback. Dynamic changes in tempo are implemented at specific points in the audio signal corresponding to local minimums in the fade-in and fade-out characteristics of the compression/expansion scheme. An audio signal is marked to define temporal slices of audio data. Mark positions may be selected to minimize significant transient activity midway between consecutive marks. Fade-in and fade-out functions are associated with the leading side and trailing side, respectively, of each mark, creating a series of cross-fading "mounds" with peaks at each mark. When a tempo change is requested (e.g., a user selects a new tempo value in a user interface), the tempo change is delayed until the start of the next "mound" (i.e., the next fade-in). Thus, despite the tempo change, each mound uses a contiguous set of audio data, preventing the clicks and pops associated with skips in the audio data. Cross-fading minimizes any effects of desynchronization caused by overlapping mounds of differing speeds.