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  2. Aventics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aventics

    The company was formed in 2013 through the divestment of the pneumatics division of the Bosch Rexroth.In December 2013, it was sold to the financial investor Triton Partners [3] and traded as Aventics from February 2014 until the Emerson purchase in July 2018.

  3. Lincoln Enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Enterprises

    The strips were then processed and sold on by the company. [ 6 ] Nine months after the company was founded, Roddenberry fired Bjo Trimble and her husband John, who had by then built most of the mailing lists from the names and addresses they had collected from all across the country to save the show from cancellation and produced most of its ...

  4. List of book distributors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_book_distributors

    This is a list of book distributors, companies that act as distributors for book publishers, selling primarily to the book trade.The list includes defunct and merged/acquired companies, and distributors whose primary business is not books, such as comic books.

  5. King Features Syndicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Features_Syndicate

    King Features Syndicate, Inc. is an American content distribution and animation studio, consumer product licensing and print syndication company owned by Hearst Communications that distributes about 150 comic strips, newspaper columns, editorial cartoons, puzzles, and games to nearly 5,000 newspapers worldwide.

  6. Rod Stewart sells song catalogue for almost $100m - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/rod-stewart-sells-song...

    Rod Stewart has agreed to sell the rights to his song catalogue to Iconic Artists Group in a deal worth almost $100m (£79m).. Stewart, 79, has enjoyed a lengthy solo career since his time in rock ...

  7. Stanford Research Institute Problem Solver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_Research...

    The Stanford Research Institute Problem Solver, known by its acronym STRIPS, is an automated planner developed by Richard Fikes and Nils Nilsson in 1971 at SRI International. [1] The same name was later used to refer to the formal language of the inputs to this planner.

  8. Direct market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_market

    The defining characteristic of the direct market however is non-returnability: unlike book store and news stand distribution, which operate on a sale-or-return model, direct market distribution prohibits distributors and retailers from returning their unsold merchandise for refunds. In exchange for more favorable ordering terms, retailers and ...

  9. Google Catalogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Catalogs

    This was a free Google service. Catalog search was a major digitization project for Google, as thousands of merchant catalogs were scanned and made accessible to the public. Users were able to flip through pages of catalogs from a variety of industries, except those that focus on liquor, tobacco, firearms, or similar products. [4]