b'coz transformer is not a moving parts so it works on the princeple of mutual induction
Assuming you mean a data-storage device (for use with computers) then the most clear cut answer would be a CD-ROM or a DVD-ROM, neither of which have any moving parts by themselves. The disc-reader however would have moving parts which may negate the idea of a stationary storage device.Flash memory is another form of storage which is commonly found in USB drives and small electronics. It has no moving parts.
A simple machine doesn't have any moving parts.
Assuming you mean a data-storage device (for use with computers) then the most clear cut answer would be a CD-ROM or a DVD-ROM, neither of which have any moving parts by themselves. The disc-reader however would have moving parts which may negate the idea of a stationary storage device.Flash memory is another form of storage which is commonly found in USB drives and small electronics. It has no moving parts.
No,because it has moving parts in it and a simple machine dose not have any moving parts
no
no, RAM doesn't has any mobile parts its fixed at one place only with no parts movable.
That is the expected behavior. Most storage devices on a computer are disks, therefore it will refer to any storage device as a "disk", even if it has no moving parts.
rheumatic device Answer: It's a mnemonic device.
They go to which thing that they have been rubbed or reacted.
A simple machine. Examples include levers, pulleys, and inclined planes, which can help reduce the amount of force needed to perform a task.
Any device on a LAN is called a node.