AmyXun is a small, technically focused software house that concentrates on two complementary authoring tools for academic, technical and educational publishing. AxGlyph supplies a lightweight yet precise vector-drawing environment in which engineers, scientists, teachers and students construct flowcharts, circuit diagrams, chemical schematics, mechanical sketches and publication-ready figures without the bulk of a full CAD suite; its constraint-based drawing engine keeps lines, arrows and symbols locked to scientific scale and style guides, while LaTeX labeling and scalable output plug directly into Word, PowerPoint or journal templates. AxMath extends the same philosophy to mathematical notation: the program behaves simultaneously as a visual formula editor, a scientific calculator and a LaTeX code generator, letting users type or hand-draw expressions, watch real-time rendering, evaluate variables, and then paste high-resolution MathML or LaTeX back into documents or web pages. Together the pair form an inexpensive workflow for lab reports, theses, white papers and online courseware where crisp diagrams and correct equations must appear side-by-side. Both applications stay portable, start rapidly from a USB stick, and require no administrative rights, making them popular on shared university workstations and conference presentation laptops. AmyXun’s software is available free of charge on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always install the latest upstream builds, and can be queued for batch deployment across multiple programs.