Amazon Kendra might be a bit more popular than Apache Lucene. We know about 7 links to it since March 2021 and only 7 links to Apache Lucene. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I have to find a few examples of relatively small programming libraries that has been rewritten/ported to C++, C# and Java. Example: Lucene (it isn't that small, but still shows what I'm looking for). Source: about 1 year ago
He is talking about impacting the search algorithm. Putting a “+” sounds like it is negatively impacting search quality. Source: over 1 year ago
For example Lucene is a core project common to many search engines, lots of things built ontop of it. And there are similar libraries Https://lucene.apache.org/core/. Source: over 1 year ago
Full-text search Elasticsearch is built on top of Apache Lucene, an open-source information retrieval software. Apache Lucene enables Elasticsearch can perform complex full-text searches using a single or combination of word phrases against its No SQL database. - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
If I had control of the back end I would implement a full-text engine such as Lucene. Generate the lookup table as a batch job and then perform the FTS when the request comes in. If you try to do this real-time, your search will take exponentially longer the larger the data set gets. Source: almost 2 years ago
I recommend you look deeper at LangChain if you are not already familiar with it. You can also look at the aws-samples Github page; they have some great examples to get you started. For example, you could add Amazon Kendra to the mix. Connect it with one of its many sources, like Atlassian Confluence, and set up Langchain to utilize the Kendra retriever. And now you have a chatbot that can answer questions based... - Source: dev.to / 6 months ago
If you're doing this on AWS they already have a really contained solution for this. I'm sure Azure has a similar solution. I'll assume AWS - if so, AWS Kendra is a good place to start. This will give you performant natural language understanding and enterprise search support. Then you just need to map the rest of your desired functions to core AWS solutions. Source: 11 months ago
> > One of the most important capabilities of Bedrock is how easy it is to customize a model. Customers simply point Bedrock at a few labeled examples in Amazon S3, and the service can fine-tune the model for a particular task without having to annotate large volumes of data (as few as 20 examples is enough) I can't even. Does anyone remember Amazon Kendra [1]? They promised the same there. "Here's an ML powered... - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
Amazon Kendra is now FedRAMP High Compliant. Amazon Kendra is now authorized as FedRAMP High in AWS GovCloud (US-West) Region. Amazon Kendra is a highly accurate intelligent search service powered by machine learning. Kendra reimagines enterprise search for your websites and applications so your employees and customers can easily find the content they are looking for, even when it's scattered across multiple... - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
It supports using Lambdas for fulfilling specific duties, such as placing orders, as well as integrating into Kendra which is a ML powered search service. You can effectively have a conversation asking for information and it can intelligently look through your business domain and respond with answers in a naturally conversational way. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
ElasticSearch - Elasticsearch is an open source, distributed, RESTful search engine.
Google Cloud Search - Search across all your company's content in G Suite.
Algolia - Algolia's Search API makes it easy to deliver a great search experience in your apps & websites. Algolia Search provides hosted full-text, numerical, faceted and geolocalized search.
Curiosity.ai - Find everything everywhere: Curiosity puts all your information at your fingertips so you can focus and get more done.
Apache Solr - Solr is an open source enterprise search server based on Lucene search library, with XML/HTTP and...
OpenSearch - OpenSearch is a community-driven, open source search and analytics suite derived from Apache 2.0 licensed Elasticsearch 7.10.2 & Kibana 7.10.2. It consists of a search engine daemon, and a visualization and user interface, OpenSearch Dashboards.