Wiederhold's career included: • Rapid presentation of database information for personal computing at
VisiCorp (1982). • Model-based transformation of relational database information into object-oriented representations (1986). • The architectural concepts leading to
mediators (1990). • The development of a very-high-level Megaprogramming language for software composition in 1992. • A means to protect outgoing private information in practical databases used for collaboration in 1995. • Means to integrate projections into the future into information systems—SimQL in 1996. • An approach to scalable semantic interoperation via an
ontology algebra in 1998. • A method to value software intangibles based on balancing initial and maintenance efforts to allocate income in 2005. In 2001 he retired to be an
emeritus professor of
computer science with courtesy appointments in
medicine and
electrical engineering. Since then he has been consulting through
MITRE corporation with the U.S. Treasury on assessing the values of
intellectual property exported from the U.S. as part of
offshoring. He authored and coauthored more than 400 published papers and reports on computing and medicine and served as the associate editor or editor-in-chief of ACM's
Transactions on Database Systems (TODS) from 1982 to 1992. Major books were
Database Design, McGraw-Hill, 1977 and 1982 and
Valuing Intellectual Capital, Springer 2013. In June 2011, Wiederhold was awarded an honorary doctorate by
NUI Galway. Wiederhold and his wife Voy developed historical exhibits in Stanford's
Computer Science Building in cooperation with the Computer Museum History Center, now the
Computer History Museum in
Mountain View.{{cite web |title= Computer History Exhibits[ ==Personal life and death==