Solstice sells three kinds of things: dataset products for teams that need realistic data without privacy drag, governed AI systems for high-accountability environments, and strategic decision tools for simulation and planning. Underneath those products sits a broader agent layer, with Iris taking point as the public-facing intelligence interface.
These are the main commercial surfaces today. Each one solves a different buyer problem and should be sold accordingly, rather than blended into one vague "AI studio" story.
The datasets catalog is where Solstice sells structured, simulation-rich data products. These are not just rows for the sake of rows. The packs are designed to behave like miniature operating environments: realistic enough for dashboards, buyer-safe demos, sandbox modeling, and product validation without relying on real customer data.
Olympus is the enterprise product for teams that need AI systems to survive scrutiny. It handles portable context, policy enforcement, governed approvals, and replayable auditability in environments where model outputs alone are not enough. This is the right front door for security, compliance, platform, and AI governance buyers.
Strategic Intelligence is the simulation layer for planning problems where the question is not "what can AI write?" but "what should we do next?" It is built for scenario modeling, adversarial pressure-testing, and decision support in contexts where second-order effects matter.
These are not the main commercial wedges, but they matter. They show where the Solstice stack can be pushed into domain-specific interfaces before the full product story hardens.
Toushi is the imaging-side prototype in the Solstice healthcare stack. It shows how the broader system can move from general reasoning into clinical image workflows, guided review, and specialist-facing interaction.
Kizuna shows what Solstice looks like when the interface has to guide a technician through a physical, accuracy-sensitive task. It is one of the clearest examples of Solstice moving beyond chat into embodied, operational software.
The agent layer is how people interact with Solstice systems directly. Iris should take point here, because she is the broadest expression of the interface and the easiest way to understand the rest of the stack.
Iris is the best starting point for the agent section because she translates the Solstice stack into something people can actually interact with. She is the liaison, explainer, and orchestration interface that makes the broader architecture legible. If the brand needs a face for the agent layer, Iris should be that face.
Sol is the practical execution agent in the stack. It is useful because it proves the underlying tool-use and workflow layer is real. This is the most builder-facing agent in the product family, and it helps make the system credible to technical users.
Helios is the vehicle-native expression of the Solstice agent stack. It shows what the system looks like when the interface has to operate in the real world under latency, safety, and context constraints.