| MyST/VS™ | 2008 |
| A MyST-X application framework that automates the creation, branding, deployment, and maintenance of custom, vertical search solutions built on Google CSE technology. See, for example, Free Content Search Integrated Into MyST Blogsite and listen to MyST co-founder, Bill French talk about vertical search in this Webmaster Radio Interview. | |
| Custom Branding for MyST Topic Cloud® | 2007 |
| A MyST-X application framework that allows a MyST Topic Cloud to automatically inherit an arbitrary brand identity from a company's blogsite. See Branded Topic Clouds Bolster Corporate Visibility. | |
| MyST AlliGate™ | 2007 |
| An enhanced business logic plug-in to MyST SlimeGate™ to detect (and reject) egregious bandwidth offenders. See Fighting Back Against Big, Hungry, Orange Alligators. | |
| X-Lint™ Content Quality Analyzer | 2006 |
| A MyST Web Services Platform business logic plug-in that identifies and reports on specific content quality issues in the publicly visible web content. See Don't Cut Corners on Technical or Content Quality. | |
| MyST SlimeGate™ | 2005 |
| A network server security layer that uses learning heuristics and dynamic firewall technology to cutoff server access from hackers, spammers, and other nefarious user agents. | |
| Topic Cloud® | 2005 |
| A web service providing representations of data in user interfaces and machine interfaces, namely, keywords, key-phrases, posting dates, author names, and other metadata, to promote increased content discoverability, awareness, and navigation. See early Topic Cloud announcement. | |
| MyST Enterprise RSS Services™ | 2005 |
| A MyST-X application framework for automated creation, maintenance, publishing, and tracking of RSS (and Atom, OPML, etc.) content feeds from disparate enterprise content sources. | |
| MyST Click Director™ | 2004 |
| A web service for tracking click-though and impression rates for HTML, RSS, Atom, and other web feed formats. | |
| MyST-X™ | 2004 |
| An extensible XML+XSL scripting engine capable of automating virtually any MyST Web Service Platform process, including generation, deployment, and maintenance of MyST Blogsite applications. | |
| MyST Blogsite® | 2003 |
| An agile, standards-based application framework, resting on the MyST Web Services Platform, for building flexible, channel-oriented web sites and semantic web applications. | |
| Mail2Channel® | 2003 |
| A secure e-mail gateway for publishing to MySmartChannels. See Mail2Channel Gateway: Secure Weblog Authoring via E-mail. | |
| MyST Web Services™ Platform (MySmartTags™, MySmartChannels™) | 2002 |
| An XML Web service foundation for capturing, persisting, and relating information about people, places, ideas and concepts to words and phrases that are easily recognizable and commonly used in the context of written and spoken languages (see http://myst-technology.com/) | |
| Xodus | 2002 |
| An XML web service that presents a unified view of multiple information system repositories | |
| Elmer | 2001 |
| An architecture for integrating disparate enterprise information systems and providing powerful, ontology-based search and discovery tools that span all integrated system; based on XML, topic maps, HTTP, pub/sub, multicast messaging other standard technologies. See: Elmer Preview - XML 2001 Conference Orlando | |
| Surveyor™ | 1998 |
| An award-winning software reengineering and documentation tool for C/C++ applications | |
| Genitor® Corporate Edition™ | 1997 |
| An award-winning software reengineering tool for C/C++ applications | |
| Genitor® OCS™ (Object Construction Suite) | 1995 |
| An award-winning graphical code construction environment for C/C++ development teams; automatically generated code and documentation from abstract object descriptions maintained in a central repository. | |
| Lighthouse for Windows™ | 1993 |
| Home automation software control system for X-10 compatible devices; became a de facto standard for X-10 computer controllers during the 1990s | |
| SMKGen™ | 1987 |
| Automatic software dependency analyzer; automatically generated scripts for SMK as well as impact analysis reports | |
| SVM™ | 1986 |
| Version control system for MS-DOS, OS/2, Windows, BTOS, and CTOS operating systems; later ported to MVS, VM, UNIX, AS/400 | |
| UPCO™ Display Adapter | 1985 |
| One of the first high performance graphic display adaptors for IBM PC and compatible computers; at the time when standard PC graphic resolution was 320 x 200 pixels (four colors) or 640 x 400 pixels (monochrome), the UPCO Display Adapter delivered 1024 x 1024 pixels (4096 colors from a palette of 16 million colors), four independent display layers, and hardware acceleration for graphical drawing primitives. | |
| SMK™ | 1984 |
| Automated software “make” facility, more powerful than the traditional UNIX make utility | |
| Modgraph Display Adaptor Firmware and Device Drivers | 1983 |
| A variety of firmware and device driver implementations for terminal emulation and communications for a line of high-performance display adaptors manufactured by Modgraph, Inc. | |
| GIS/GOS | 1983 |
| Graphical Input System/Graphical Output System; a portable I/O pipeline for 2D and 3D graphics; supported single source implementation of graphical applications running a variety of operating systems and display hardware; OEM licensed by an automotive CAD/CAM manufacturer | |
| PUMS/MOLD | 1983 |
| Platform independent user interface definition language, compiler, and runtime environment; allowed single source user interface programming for applications written in C, FORTRAN, Pascal, assembly, running a variety of operating systems and display hardware; OEM licensed to automotive CAD/CAM manufacturer; foundation for portable UI for SVM | |
| Detroit People Mover Control Center Simulator | 1982 |
| PC-based simulation of a proposed control center for the yet-to-be-built Detroit People Mover; allowed ergonomic studies and refinement of the control center before the center was actually built | |
| VGraph® | 1982 |
| First commercially available Tektronix 4010/4014 graphics terminal emulator for MS-DOS, PC-DOS, and Z-DOS computer systems; also provided emulation for a number of popular text terminals such as VT-100 and VT-52 families | |
| FAS-50™ | 1981 |
| Modification for Heath/Zenith Z-100 computers to double the display resolution (from 25 to 50 lines of text) | |
| PRNSpool™ | 1980 |
| First commercially available software print spooler for MS-DOS, PC-DOS, and Z-DOS computers | |