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The National Software Reference Library (NSRL), is a project of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) which maintains a repository of known software, file profiles and file signatures for use by law enforcement and other organizations involved with computer forensic investigations.
The Digital Library of Mathematical Functions (DLMF) is an online project at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to develop a database of mathematical reference data for special functions and their applications.
NIST Webbook NIST Chemistry Webbook National Institute of Standards and Technology: spectra CAS ionization energy mass spectrum, InChI C+CAS "NIST Webbook". NMRShiftDB University of Cologne: organic nuclear magnetic resonance spectra "NMRShiftDB". 43,581 NORMAN SLE NORMAN Suspect List Exchange environmental monitoring "NORMAN SLE". 110,000 OMG
NIST had an operating budget for fiscal year 2007 (October 1, 2006 – September 30, 2007) of about $843.3 million. NIST's 2009 budget was $992 million, and it also received $610 million as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. [18] NIST employs about 2,900 scientists, engineers, technicians, and support and administrative personnel.
JAMA is a software library for performing numerical linear algebra tasks created at National Institute of Standards and Technology in 1998 similar in functionality to LAPACK. Functionality [ edit ]
The library is simply a collection of header files, and therefore does not need to be independently compiled. Some support for sparse matrix storage is provided. The source code is in the public domain. TNT is mature, and NIST classifies its development status as active maintenance. The principal designer of TNT is Roldan Pozo.
This table denotes, if a cryptography library provides the technical requisites for FIPS 140, and the status of their FIPS 140 certification (according to NIST's CMVP search, [27] modules in process list [28] and implementation under test list).
Extended MNIST (EMNIST) is a newer dataset developed and released by NIST to be the (final) successor to MNIST. [15] [16] MNIST included images only of handwritten digits. EMNIST includes all the images from NIST Special Database 19 (SD 19), which is a large database of 814,255 handwritten uppercase and lower case letters and digits.