[1] In 2002, Synex Systems was acquired by privately owned Lasata Software of Perth, Australia.
In 2007, Systems Union was acquired by privately held Infor Global Solutions,[2] a U.S. company that specializes in enterprise software.
Synex Systems products were diverse and targeted accounting, civil engineering, minicomputer thin client, and file compression utility markets.
PK Harmony allows users to transfer data to and from a Pick operating system legacy host and a DOS or Windows based PC.
F9 Financial Reporting was developed starting in 1986 to allow a non-technical user, typically an accountant, to create a dynamic, customized general ledger financial report using a spreadsheet that is 'hot-linked' to an accounting system's general ledger This product is currently in wide use, is still being updated, and is the longest lasting and most profitable of the products developed by Synex Systems.
is available as an add-in for 1-2-3 Release 2/2.01, and as a terminate-and-stay-resident (TSR) utility for any version of 1-2-3, Symphony or any other programs that read or write 1-2-3 R2 format worksheets.
[citation needed] He also developed a sophisticated corrupt spreadsheet recovery system that was built into SQZ!
[citation needed] Synex's Waterworks[17] is a water distribution network analyzer based on F9 computer spreadsheet add-in technology.
Waterworks enhances municipal water distribution design by combining both graphical and numerical results in a single interface and allows data exchange with CAD packages.
Waterworks core functionality was a Fortran coded algorithm developed at the University of British Columbia school of engineering.
Many accounting products marketed at the time used Btrieve as the underlying database engine and developing an F9 interface to these accounting products required highly detailed access to the data structures which easy examination of the data greatly aided.
Although limited in user appeal, @trieve was a useful utility for experts that required detailed access to Btrieve-based data.