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Medicines, vitamins, supplements and personal care products Unilever Philippines: Consumer goods Food products, beverages and personal care Taguig: 1927 Foods, drinks and beauty products, part of Unilever (UK) Union Bank of the Philippines: Financials Banks Pasig: 1982 Universal bank United Coconut Planters Bank: Financials Banks Makati: 1963
Asus. Pasig. Canon. Taguig [3] Cisco Systems. Makati [4] Cloudwalk Digital. Quezon City [5] Dell Technologies.
Cagsawa Travel and Tours, Inc. – plies to Albay and Camarines Sur provinces in Bicol. Candon Bus Line – plies from Avenida to Candon. Cavite Batangas Transport Service Cooperative (CBTSC) – plies Alfonso To Pasay / Lawton. Celyrosa Express – plies Indang / Calatagan to Pasay.
Patents in the Philippines. Republic Act No. 8293, otherwise known as The Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines lays down the rules and regulations that grant, and enforce patents in the Philippines. Patents may be granted to technical solutions such as an inventions, machines, devices, processes, or an improvement of any of the foregoing.
This list of pharmaceutical compound number prefixes provides codes used by individual pharmaceutical companies when naming their pharmaceutical drug candidates. . Pharmaceutical companies generally produce large numbers of compounds in the research phase for which it is impractical to use often long and cumbersome systematic chemical names, and for which the effort to generate nonproprietary ...
GOMER ( G et O ut of M y E mergency R oom) is a name in medical slang for any patient who continually uses emergency room services for non-emergency conditions; its use is informal and pejorative. Element names from the periodic table are used in some hospitals as a placeholder for patient names, ex. Francium Male.
The first trademark law in place in the Philippines was that which Queen Maria Cristina of Spain promulgated on October 26, 1888. This law accorded trademark rights to the person who registered first. [6] This law was replaced on March 6, 1903 by Act No. 666 or the Trademark and Trade Name Law of the Philippine Islands, which abandoned prior ...
The current copyright law, Republic Act No. 8293 (Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines), was passed in 1998. The Philippines was removed from Special 301 Report of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) in 2014, citing "significant legislative and regulatory reforms" in the area of intellectual property. The country began to be ...