Portals definition
Portals means eServices and Phoenix;
Portals means the BT CMS Portal and/or the AWS Management Console that the Customer accesses for service administration and management of the AWS services order online by the Customer.
Portals means the BT CMS Portal and/or the Microsoft® Azure Management Portal that the Customer accesses for service administration and management of the Microsoft® Azure services order online by the Customer.
Examples of Portals in a sentence
Ensure all Portals are synced to Gateway - Complete audio/video connections from Portal to customer’s equipment.
More Definitions of Portals
Portals shall have the meaning given to it in Section 2.1(e)(i)(3) hereof.
Portals means either the “Desktop Portal” (the Customer-hosted website that loads by default when the default browser of a Desktop Device is opened (together with any alternative default start page operated by or on behalf of Customer for access to the Internet by Subscribers)) or the “Phone Portal” (the Customer-hosted website that loads by default when the default browser of a Phone Device is opened (together with any alternative default start page operated by or on behalf of Customer for access to the Internet by Subscribers)).
Portals means the BT CMS and/or the Alibaba Portal that the Customer accesses for ordering, service administration and management of the Alibaba Services as ordered online by the Customer.
Portals means either or both (as the case may be) of the platforms provided by GASPOOL for the purpose of operating the processes relating to balancing group management and system balancing activities (Balancing Group Portal and Tendering platform for balancing services, respectively).
Portals means the Scania Fleet Management Portal and the Scania Portal and any other portals, through which the Services are provided.
Portals toward an application framework for interoperability”, Commun. ACM 47, 10 (Oct. 2004), 93-97. available xxxx://xxx.xxx.xxx/10.1145/1022594.1022600 [2] Hey, X. and Xxx, X., eds. Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience, Vol. 14, No. 13-15 (2002). Special Issue on Grid Computing Environments. [3] Science Gateways Workshop, Global Grid Forum 14, July 27-30 2005, Chicago, Illinois. Workshop URL: xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxx.xxx/GGF14/ggf_events_ne xt_schedule_Gateways.htm [4] W3C Working Group, "Web Services Architecture", W3C, 2004, Available xxxx://xxx.x0.xxx/TR/ws-arch [5] X. Xxxxxxx, X. Xxxx, X. Xxxxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxx, X. Xxxx, X.X. Xxxxxxx, X.X. Xxxxxxx, X. Xx, X.X XxXxxxxx. (2006) “Instrument Monitoring, Data Sharing and Archiving Using Common Instrument Middleware Architecture (CIMA)”, Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, 46(3) p.1017-25, May-June 2006. [6] X. Xxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxx, “GridSphere: a portal framework for building collaborations”, Concurrency - Practice and Experience, 2004, 16(5), pp. 503-513. [7] X. Xxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxx, "Java Portlet Specification version 1.0", 2003, Available xxxx://xxx.xxx.xxx/aboutJava/communityprocess/ final/jsr168 [8] X.X. Xxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxx, (2002) “The PERMIS
Portals means the WAP Portal defined below and the Web Subscription Portal both described in Exhibit A1 through which Subscribers can access Content.