Examples of SESI in a sentence
A number of lessons can be learnt from the examples of successes and failures recorded in the case studies produced during the various phases of the SESI project.
Originals or true and complete copies of all documents or other written materials underlying items listed in the Disclosure Schedule have been furnished or made available to SESI in the form in which each of such documents is in effect, and will not be modified in any material respect prior to the Closing Date without SESI's prior written consent.
Effective December 12, 2002, the Company acquired 100% of SESI by the issuance of 2,997,135 common shares of the Company.
The primary reason for the purchase of SESI was to acquire the Sonic technology and Canadian and United States patents.
A complete and correct copy of each Material Contract has been furnished to or made available to SESI.
All shares will be released when an accumulation of $3,000,000 in revenues have been attained within five years of the acquisition of SESI.
Thus an earlier comparison between France and Japan (see namely the studies by researchers of the SESI network ) compared the compartmentalisation of functions that "traditionally" characterises French companies, the relative isolation of research and development from the other functional components of the company - the production unit in particular – to the point where the latter might even be driven to establish its own capacity for developing new products or processes.
The empirical data are original ones collected within the SESI project network.
Nevertheless there is continuous internal restructuring; for example, the break-up of a major global firm into two parts, both of them studied in the SESI project.
Ct. at 1661-62 (emphasizing that the Act was designed to give “aspiring competitors every possible incentive to enter local retail telephone markets,” with no mention of distinguishing particular geographic markets), and 1685 (upholding Commission rules requiring ILECs to offer combinations of UNEs on the ground that the rules were “meant to remove practical barriers to competitive entry into local-exchange markets”).