GrapeCity
Effective November 1, 2023, GrapeCity is rebranding to MESCIUS.
Though the name has changed, MESCIUS remains a valued Enterprise Partner with ComponentSource, dedicated to enhancing the quality of its products and services.
GrapeCity is an award-winning Microsoft Gold Certified Partner and one of the world's largest providers of developer components. For over 40 years, GrapeCity has provided enterprises around the world with state-of-the-art developer tools and components, software services, and solutions. GrapeCity's products provide developers, designers, and architects with the ultimate collection of easy-to-use tools for building sleek, high-performing, feature-complete applications. With a diverse product line, including ComponentOne Studio, ActiveReports, Wijmo Enterprise, Spread, DataViewsJS, and the GrapeCity Documents API, GrapeCity delivers spreadsheets and reporting tools, grids, charts, mobile controls, and UI components for JavaScript and .NET enterprise applications, mobile and beyond. GrapeCity's component philosophy comes down to four elements - speed, flexibility, familiarity, and a small footprint.
Code Systems
Code Systems Corporation creates products and technologies that allow software to run reliably and securely anywhere. In support of this mission, the company conducts fundamental research in the areas of formal semantics, programming languages, complexity theory, and cryptography, as well as maintains the Xenocode virtual machine, recompilation and semantic analysis engines on which its commercial products are based.
Code Systems was founded in 2002 and consists of a team of veteran Microsoft engineers and academic researchers.
Gridmedia Technologies
Gridmedia Technologies offers educational programs, game development, publishing and social media solutions. They perform open, scientific research and publish scientific papers and articles.
PowerBASIC
The history of PowerBASIC compilers goes back over 25 years. That's when Bob Zale, PowerBASIC's founder, created BASIC/Z, the first interactive compiler for CP/M and MDOS. It was extended to MS-DOS, and in 1987 Borland published it as the now legendary Turbo BASIC. The compiler became officially known as PowerBASIC in 1990 when Bob Zale founded PowerBASIC Inc.