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  2. Milvus (vector database) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milvus_(vector_database)

    Support of vector quantization for lossy input data compression, including product quantization (PQ) and scalar quantization (SQ), that trades stored data size for accuracy, Re-ranking. Milvus similarity search engine relies on heavily-modified forks of third-party open-source similarity search libraries, such as Faiss , [ 7 ] [ 8 ] DiskANN [ 9 ...

  3. Vector database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_database

    A vector database, vector store or vector search engine is a database that can store vectors (fixed-length lists of numbers) along with other data items. Vector databases typically implement one or more Approximate Nearest Neighbor algorithms, [1] [2] [3] so that one can search the database with a query vector to retrieve the closest matching database records.

  4. MNIST database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MNIST_database

    Previously, NIST released two datasets: Special Database 1 (NIST Test Data I, or SD-1); and Special Database 3 (or SD-2). They were released on two CD-ROMs. They were released on two CD-ROMs. SD-1 was the test set, and it contained digits written by high school students, 58,646 images written by 500 different writers.

  5. Protocol Buffers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_Buffers

    A schema for a particular use of protocol buffers associates data types with field names, using integers to identify each field. (The protocol buffer data contains only the numbers, not the field names, providing some bandwidth/storage savings compared with systems that include the field names in the data.)

  6. Serialization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serialization

    Flow diagram. In computing, serialization (or serialisation, also referred to as pickling in Python) is the process of translating a data structure or object state into a format that can be stored (e.g. files in secondary storage devices, data buffers in primary storage devices) or transmitted (e.g. data streams over computer networks) and reconstructed later (possibly in a different computer ...

  7. Binary Golay code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_Golay_code

    Lexicographic code: Order the vectors in V lexicographically (i.e., interpret them as unsigned 24-bit binary integers and take the usual ordering). Starting with w 0 = 0, define w 1, w 2, ..., w 12 by the rule that w n is the smallest integer which differs from all linear combinations of previous elements in at least eight coordinates.

  8. Single instruction, multiple data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_instruction...

    SIMD was the basis for vector supercomputers of the early 1970s such as the CDC Star-100 and the Texas Instruments ASC, which could operate on a "vector" of data with a single instruction. Vector processing was especially popularized by Cray in the 1970s and 1980s. Vector processing architectures are now considered separate from SIMD computers ...

  9. Relevance vector machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relevance_vector_machine

    where is the kernel function (usually Gaussian), are the variances of the prior on the weight vector (,), and , …, are the input vectors of the training set. [ 4 ] Compared to that of support vector machines (SVM), the Bayesian formulation of the RVM avoids the set of free parameters of the SVM (that usually require cross-validation-based ...