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  2. OPTICS algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPTICS_algorithm

    Ordering points to identify the clustering structure (OPTICS) is an algorithm for finding density-based [1] clusters in spatial data. It was presented by Mihael Ankerst, Markus M. Breunig, Hans-Peter Kriegel and Jörg Sander. [ 2 ]

  3. CURE algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CURE_algorithm

    CURE (no. of points,k) Input : A set of points S Output : k clusters For every cluster u (each input point), in u.mean and u.rep store the mean of the points in the cluster and a set of c representative points of the cluster (initially c = 1 since each cluster has one data point).

  4. Mallet (software project) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallet_(software_project)

    MALLET is an integrated collection of Java code useful for statistical natural language processing, document classification, cluster analysis, information extraction, topic modeling and other machine learning applications to text.

  5. DBSCAN - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DBSCAN

    Assign each non-core point to a nearby cluster if the cluster is an ε (eps) neighbor, otherwise assign it to noise. A naive implementation of this requires storing the neighborhoods in step 1, thus requiring substantial memory. The original DBSCAN algorithm does not require this by performing these steps for one point at a time.

  6. Oracle RAC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_RAC

    With the release of Oracle Database 10g Release 2 (10.2), Cluster Ready Services was renamed to Oracle Clusterware. When using Oracle 10g or higher, Oracle Clusterware is the only clusterware that you need for most platforms on which Oracle RAC operates (except for Tru cluster, in which case you need vendor clusterware).

  7. Weka (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weka_(software)

    Free availability under the GNU General Public License. Portability, since it is fully implemented in the Java programming language and thus runs on almost any modern computing platform. A comprehensive collection of data preprocessing and modeling techniques. Ease of use due to its graphical user interfaces.

  8. Affinity propagation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_propagation

    In statistics and data mining, affinity propagation (AP) is a clustering algorithm based on the concept of "message passing" between data points. [1] Unlike clustering algorithms such as k-means or k-medoids, affinity propagation does not require the number of clusters to be determined or estimated before running the algorithm.

  9. Raft (algorithm) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raft_(algorithm)

    Raft offers a generic way to distribute a state machine across a cluster of computing systems, ensuring that each node in the cluster agrees upon the same series of state transitions. It has a number of open-source reference implementations, with full-specification implementations in Go, C++, Java, and Scala. [2]