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Van

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Van

, van
For some names with this prefix not found below, see the principal part of the name.
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References in periodicals archive
"I was working for First National Bank and we obtained a value-added network service licence," he recalls.
The new specifications will make it easier for telecommunication operators and vendors to develop value-added network functions.
Since beginning services in 1985 as a value-added network, FENICS has provided services to more than 50,000 businesses in total.
video game market, elements of Japan's toy industry created TOYNES, a value-added network (VAN in typical Japanese abbreviation, or fukakachi tsushinmo) for the toy industry in 1989.
Morgan Foods has employed Inovis' TrustedLink EDI transformation software and value-added network (VAN) services since the company first began facilitating electronic commerce with its retail trading partners in 1994.
Inovis, a provider of business commerce automation solutions, has announced the availability of its nextgeneration services network, powering Inovis' value-added network (VAN) and outsourced managed services focused on trading partner management.
This analysis considers two kinds of information: a descriptive profile of the industry and an analysis of the value-chain of activity (channels) that link the various organizations in the value-added network from suppliers to end-users.
Edwards & Co.; two venture capital firms bought Baan; and value-added network provider Global eXchange Services bought Celarix.
Unlike conventional value-added network providers that price data communications at a variable rate based on usage (such as message size, number of messages, and time of day) ANX provides data communications and data translation services at a flat rate.
DIRECWAY brings the power of satellite broadband to all enterprises, including high-speed Internet and intranet access, streamed content delivery, file or package delivery, and value-added network services.
the use of an electronic transmission medium (originally a value-added network, but increasingly the open, public Internet) rather than the dispatch of physical storage media such as magnetic tapes and disks;
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