Dido (other)
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Dido (other)
Dido was founder and first queen of Carthage. Dido or DIDO may also refer to: Arts * ''Dido, Queen of Carthage'' (play), a play by Christopher Marlowe * ''Dido and Aeneas'', an opera by Henry Purcell * ''Dido, Queen of Carthage'' (opera), an opera by Stephen Storace * ''Dido'' (Fuseli), a painting by Henry Fuseli * "Dido", a song on ''Café del Mar Aria'' * Fido Dido, a cartoon character People * Dido (singer), a British singer-songwriter * Dido Ali, Kenyan politician * Dido Elizabeth Belle, daughter of John Lindsay * Dido Fontana, an Italian photographer * Dido (footballer), a Brazilian footballer * Dido Harding, Baroness Harding of Winscombe * Dido Miles, an English actress Transport * HMS ''Dido'', the name of seven British Royal Navy vessels * Dido (train) a train, typically for railway staff, provided on a Day in, day out basis Other * The Tsez people, or Dido, an indigenous people of the North Caucasus * The Tsez language, or Dido, the language of the Tsez peopl ...
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Dido
Dido ( ; , ), also known as Elissa ( , ), was the legendary founder and first queen of the Phoenician city-state of Carthage (located in modern Tunisia), in 814 BC. In most accounts, she was the queen of the Phoenician city-state of Tyre (today in Lebanon) who fled tyranny to found her own city in northwest Africa. Known only through ancient Greek and Roman sources, all of which were written well after Carthage's founding, her historicity remains uncertain. The oldest references to Dido are attributed to Timaeus, who was active around 300 BC, or about five centuries after the date given for the foundation of Carthage. Details about Dido's character, life, and role in the founding of Carthage are best known from the account given in Virgil's epic poem, the ''Aeneid,'' written around 20 BC, which tells the legendary story of the Trojan hero Aeneas. Dido is described as a clever and enterprising woman who flees her ruthless and autocratic brother, Pygmalion, after discovering ...
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Dido Harding
Diana Mary "Dido" Harding, Baroness Harding of Winscombe (born 9 November 1967), is a British businesswoman and Conservative life peer. She served as chairwoman of NHS Improvement from 2017, and from May 2020 to April 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, she was the head of the NHS Test and Trace programme. She is a former chief executive of the TalkTalk Group where she faced calls for her to resign after a cyber attack revealed the details of up to four million customers; the company was subsequently fined £400,000 by the Information Commissioner's Office for its negligence. A member of the Conservative Party, Harding is married to Conservative Party Member of Parliament John Penrose and is a friend of former Prime Minister David Cameron. Harding was appointed as a Member of the House of Lords by Cameron in 2014. She holds a board position at the Jockey Club, which is responsible for several major horse-racing events including the Cheltenham Festival. In May 2020, Harding was ...
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DIDO (network)
Artemis Networks is a wireless technology company responsible for the software-defined radio technologies pCell and pWave. Artemis claims pCell technology is capable of speeds hundreds of times faster than other technologies under conditions of heavy usage and interference. Its founder and CEO is Steve Perlman. History Artemis was founded in the early 2000s, operating in stealth mode through the Rearden incubator, founded by Perlman. Chief scientist Antonio Forenza and Perlman released a white paper in 2011 that promoted what it called Distributed-Input-Distributed-Output technology. Following this release and an on-camera presentation, debate began about the legitimacy of the technology, due to its perceived violation of the noisy-channel coding theorem's "Shannon limit". In May 2013, Rearden LLC sought an experimentation license from the FCC. In response to an FCC question, the company disclosed that each experimental transmitter unit would contain up to 100 antennas. In Fe ...
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209 Dido
Dido (minor planet designation: 209 Dido) is a main-belt asteroid with a diameter of . It was discovered by C. H. F. Peters on October 22, 1879, in Clinton, New York and was named after the mythical Carthaginian queen Dido. This asteroid is orbiting the Sun at a distance of with an eccentricity (ovalness) of 0.058 and a period of . The orbital plane is tilted at an angle of 7.2° to the plane of the ecliptic. 209 Dido is classified as a C-type asteroid and is probably composed of carbonaceous materials. Like many asteroids of its type, it has an extremely low albedo. Photometric observations at the Palmer Divide Observatory during 2005 showed a rotation period of hours with a brightness variation of in magnitude. The pole orientation in ecliptic coordinates, as determined from multiple light curve studies, is (βp, λp) = (, ). References External links Lightcurve plot of 209 Dido Palmer Divide Observatory, B. D. Warner (2005) Asteroid Lightcurve Database (LCDB) query ...
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DIDO (software)
DIDO ( ) is a MATLAB optimal control toolbox for solving general-purpose optimal control problems.Ross, I. M. ''A Primer on Pontryagin's Principle in Optimal Control'', Second Edition, Collegiate Publishers, San Francisco, 2015.Eren, H., "Optimal Control and the Software," ''Measurements, Instrumentation, and Sensors Handbook'', Second Edition, CRC Press, 2014, pp.92-1-16. It is widely used in academia, industry, and NASA. Hailed as a breakthrough software, DIDO is based on the pseudospectral optimal control theory of Ross and Fahroo. The latest enhancements to DIDO are described in Ross. Usage DIDO utilizes trademarked expressions and objects that facilitate a user to quickly formulate and solve optimal control problems.A. M. Hawkins, ''Constrained Trajectory Optimization of a Soft Lunar Landing From a Parking Orbit,'' S.M. Thesis, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/32431 Rapidity in formulation ...
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DIDO (nuclear Reactor)
DIDO was a materials testing nuclear reactor at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell, Oxfordshire in the United Kingdom. It used enriched uranium metal fuel, and heavy water as both neutron moderator and primary coolant. There was also a graphite neutron reflector surrounding the core. In the design phase, DIDO was known as AE334 after its engineering design number. DIDO was designed to have a high neutron flux, largely to reduce the time required for testing of materials intended for use in nuclear power reactors. This also allowed for the production of intense beams of neutrons for use in neutron diffraction. DIDO was shut down in 1990. The primary facilities decommissioning is expected to be complete in 2023 with the reactor decommissioning completed in 2031 and final site clearance achieved in 2064 In all, six DIDO class reactors were constructed based on this design: *DIDO, first criticality 1956. *PLUTO, also at Harwell, first criticality 1957. *HIFAR ...
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Tsez Language
Tsez, also known as Dido (Tsez: () or ()), is a Northeast Caucasian language with about 15,000 speakers (15,354 in 2002) spoken by the Tsez, a Muslim people in the mountainous Tsunta District of southwestern Dagestan in Russia. The name is said to derive from the Tsez word for "eagle", but this is most likely a folk etymology. The name ''Dido'' is derived from the Georgian word (), meaning "big". Tsez lacks a literary tradition and is poorly represented in written form. Avar and Russian are used as literary languages locally, even in schools. However, attempts have been made to develop a stable orthography for the Tsez language as well as its relatives, mainly for the purpose of recording traditional folklore; thus, a Cyrillic script based on that of Avar is often used. Fluency in Avar is usually higher among men than women, and the younger people tend to be more fluent in Russian than in Tsez, which is probably due to the lack of education in and about the language. Tsez is ...
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Tsez People
The Tsez (also known as the Dido or the Didoi) are a North Caucasian ethnic group. Their unwritten language, also called Tsez or Dido, belongs to the Northeast Caucasian group with some 15,354 speakers.Olson, James Stuart; Pappas, Lee Brigance & Pappas, Nicholas Charles (1994), ''An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires'', p. 199. Greenwood Publishing Group, . For demographic purposes, today they are classified with the Avars with whom the Tsez share a religion, Sunni Islam, and some cultural traits. They are centered at the Tsunta district of the Republic of Dagestan, Russia. The term “Dido” is sometimes used in a broader sense to refer to the Tsez as well as the Bezhtas, Hinukhs The Hinukh ( Hinukh: гьинухъес ''hinuqes'', av, гьинухъесел , translit=hinuqesel) are a people of Dagestan living in 2 villages: Genukh, Tsuntinsky District - their 'parent village' and Novomonastyrskoe, Kizlyarsky District ..., Khwarshis and Hu ...
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Dido (train)
In British railway parlance Dido trains were typically provided to transport workers to a remote place of railway employment on a Day in, day out basis. The most common provision of this nature was to engine sheds away from centres of population where substantial numbers of staff would need to travel to or from work at times when other forms of public transport were not available. An example of this was the "Annesley Dido" which served the Great Central Railway-built Annesley engine shed north of Nottingham from at least 1929 to 8 September 1962. A variant on this theme occurred to and from Langwith Junction engine shed in Derbyshire. This service was provided after Tuxford engine shed closed in 1959, when many Tuxford staff were transferred to work at Langwith Junction. Workmen's trains Dido trains were a variant within the broad class of ''workmen's trains'' which were provided by railways from their early days until well after the Second World War. Such trains ran to meet the ...
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HMS Dido
Seven ships of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS ''Dido'', after Dido, the legendary founder and queen of Carthage. * was a 28-gun sixth-rate launched in 1784 and sold in 1817. * was an 18-gun corvette launched in 1836, used as a coal hulk after 1860, and sold in 1903. Designed by Symonds and built at Pembroke. Took part in Syrian war of 1840 and Chinese war of 1842. In Pacific 1855. Became a coal-hulk at Sheerness and was sold in 1903. *HMS ''Dido'' was to have been a wooden screw-propelled corvette. Laid down on 14 January 1861, construction was cancelled on 12 December 1863. * was a wooden screw corvette launched in 1869, hulked in 1886, renamed HMS ''Actaeon'' in 1906 and sold in 1922. * was an second class cruiser launched in 1896, used as a depot ship after 1913 and sold in 1926. * was a light cruiser, launched on 18 July 1939 and broken up in 1958. * was a launched in 1961. She was sold to the Royal New Zealand Navy in 1983 and was renamed HMNZS ''Southland ...
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Dido Miles
Dido Miles is an English actress. She is known for her role as Emma Reid on the BBC soap opera ''Doctors'', for which she has won two awards for at the RTS Midlands Awards. From 2001 to 2002, she starred in the CBBC children's series ''Oscar Charlie''. Recently credited for extra voices on Father Brown, without appearing. Career Miles trained at RADA and made her acting debut in an episode of the BBC anthology series '' Screenplay''. Following this, she appeared in the 1994 film ''Black Beauty'', and she later appeared in the 1995 film ''First Knight''. Miles also starred in the 1996 film '' Emma'' as Isabella Knight. Following this, she went on to appear in series such as ''The Bill'', '' Making Waves'', and ''Dani's House''. In May 2009, Miles portrayed the role of Viv Bates in three episodes of the BBC soap opera ''EastEnders''. In October 2019, she reprised her role as Viv for one episode. In 2012, Miles made her first appearance as Emma Reid in the BBC soap opera ''Doctors' ...
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Dido (footballer)
Edson Silva, also known by the nickname Dido (born 27 June 1962), is a former Brazilian association football player who played for Campeonato Brasileiro Série A clubs Flamengo and Santos. He holds a Dutch passport. Playing career Dido played as a midfielder for Campeonato Brasileiro Série A clubs Flamengo and Santos. As a Santos player, he played two Série A games in 1984. He has also played in Israel, moving to the country to join Beitar Jerusalem, where he retired in 1996, and started a coaching career, as Maccabi Lazarus Holon's head coach. Coaching career He coached the national teams of Vietnam in 2001 and in 2002, Chinese Taipei in 2005, and was hired on 31 December 2008 to coach Bangladesh Bangladesh (}, ), officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh, is a country in South Asia. It is the eighth-most populous country in the world, with a population exceeding 165 million people in an area of . Bangladesh is among the mos ... until this contract was term ...
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