DRC
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DRC may refer to:
- the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the third largest country, by area, on the African continent.
In European humanitarianism:
- Danish Refugee Council, a private Danish humanitarian organisation
- Disability Rights Commission, an independent non-departmental public body set up by the British Parliament to end discrimination against disabled people
In technology:
- DRC railcar, a diesel powered self propelled railway vehicle in Victoria, Australia.
- Dancing Robot Contest, a timed musical and theatrical performance in which 3 or more robotic engines attempt to manipulate a spoon while lifting each other above a platform
- Design rule checking, the area of Electronic Design Automation that determines whether a particular chip design satisfies a series of recommended parameters called Design Rules
- Digital room correction, a process in the field of acoustics where digital filters designed to ameliorate unfavorable effects of a room's acoustics are applied to the input of a sound reproduction system
- Dynamic range compression, a process that manipulates the dynamic range of an audio signal
- Dynamic Reaction Cell, a room placed before the traditional quadrupole room of an ICP-MS device for elminating isobaric interferences
In other fields:
- D'ni Restoration Council, a fictional organization that grew out of the D'ni Restoration Foundation in the fictional Myst universe
- Democratic Representative Caucus, a group of Canadian Members of Parliament who left the Canadian Alliance in 2001 in protest against the leadership of Stockwell Day
- Domain relational calculus, a calculus that was introduced by Michel Lacroix and Alain Pirotte as a declarative database query language for the relational data model
- Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, an estate in Burgundy, France that produces well-known red and white wines
- Dynamics Research Corporation, a United States-based publicly held defense contractor
- Defence Requirements Committee, a British committee during the 1930s.
- Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, an American football player