Showing 6 open source projects for "parallel"

View related business solutions
  • Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0 Icon
    Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0

    With up to 25k MAUs and unlimited Okta connections, our Free Plan lets you focus on what you do best—building great apps.

    You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your security. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
    Try free now
  • Context for your AI agents Icon
    Context for your AI agents

    Crawl websites, sync to vector databases, and power RAG applications. Pre-built integrations for LLM pipelines and AI assistants.

    Build data pipelines that feed your AI models and agents without managing infrastructure. Crawl any website, transform content, and push directly to your preferred vector store. Use 10,000+ tools for RAG applications, AI assistants, and real-time knowledge bases. Monitor site changes, trigger workflows on new data, and keep your AIs fed with fresh, structured information. Cloud-native, API-first, and free to start until you need to scale.
    Try for free
  • 1
    FreeMat
    Freemat is an interpreted, matrix-oriented development environment for engineering and scientific applications, similar to the commercial package MATLAB. Freemat provides visualization, image manipulation, and plotting as well as parallel programming.
    Leader badge
    Downloads: 168 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2

    ProC 3.0

    smart Workflow Engine

    ProC 3.0 is a scientific workflow engine to build, manage and execute workflows (pipelines) in heterogeneous environments, supporting GRID and other means of parallel processing. It includes a data management component (DMC) to transparently access databases for storage of results and automatically adds metadata to track the processing of data products, so that at every time a full processing history is available. The software was developed and used within the ESA Planck satellite mission.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3

    COS - Parallel Community Detection

    COS is a free, opensource parallel k-clique community detection method

    Clique percolation method On Steroids (COS) enable k-clique communities to be detected, in parallel, from large-scale networks. Its low memory requirements, together with its linear speedup, make it really efficient, even on dense, highly interconnected networks. COS should be the method of choice for k-clique community detection aiming at very high performance and low resource requirements.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    Simple console program intended for factor or principal components analysis. It calculates the optimal number of factors using the Horn's parallel analysis, computes the Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin and a few other measures of sampling adequacy.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Deliver trusted data with dbt Icon
    Deliver trusted data with dbt

    dbt Labs empowers data teams to build reliable, governed data pipelines—accelerating analytics and AI initiatives with speed and confidence.

    Data teams use dbt to codify business logic and make it accessible to the entire organization—for use in reporting, ML modeling, and operational workflows.
    Learn More
  • 5
    We are using a large archive of newspaper stories(GigaWordCorpus) as input to a parallel MPI program, and produce from that a list of top R terms of varying lengths M through N that are especially interesting. The program is done in C using MPI.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 6
    FlexCRFs: A Flexible Conditional Random Fields Toolkit for Labeling and Segmenting Sequence Data (this includes a parallel implementation of CRFs called PCRFs to support training CRF models on massively parallel computer systems).
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next