A Mutoscope is a flipbook-like machine that displays a series of still images in rapid succession, creating the illusion of movement. Users turn a crank to flip through the images, which are mounted on individual cards or strips. Each image is only briefly visible before the next one appears, giving the impression of continuous motion.
The types of mechanical work include static work, dynamic work, and intensive work. Static work refers to work done without motion, dynamic work involves movement, and intensive work focuses on the internal energy changes within a system.
Input work is the work done on a machine, while output work is the work done by the machine. Efficiency of a simple machine is calculated as the ratio of output work to input work. The efficiency of a simple machine is high when the output work is close to the input work, indicating that the machine is converting most of the input work into useful output work.
The formula that relates work and power is: Power = Work / Time. Power is the rate at which work is done, which is the amount of work done divided by the time it takes to do that work.
the work a machine does is the work output what it takes to do the work is the work input
The formula to find the work output of efficiency is: Work output = Efficiency x Input work. Efficiency is a ratio of output work to input work, so multiplying this ratio by the input work gives the work output.
It originated from flip books.
A mutoscope works on the same principle as a "flip-book" where you flip through the pages of a book and drawings on each page seem to be in motion like an animated cartoon. The original mutoscopes had a series of photos attached to a wheel. You looked in a peephole at the top and by turning a handle, spun the wheel so that the flicking pictures appeared to be moving.
Probably not. The cards themselves may still be protected if they were renewed, and the photos may carry their own protection.
a Trick answer but Three years old- if they were the race Horses filmed by Eadward Muybridge in motion studies with a primitive movie camera. Boxers followed in the wind-up Mutoscope era. some of these were later motorized. Horse racing indirectly helped to foster cinematography!
Sherlock Holmes Baffled. American Mutoscope and Biograph Co., April 1900, c. February 1903. 1 reel. 18 ft. 16 mm."An early trick film, clearly made for viewing on a mutoscope or peepshow machine. Although a tiny, trivial piece, it is historic as being the earliest known use of Sherlock Holmes in moving pictures." (Michael Pointer)The film was photographed on the roof of the New York studio by Arthur Marvin on April 26, 1900, but was not copyrighted until 1903.Review: Sherlock Holmes Journal, 8, No. 4 (Summer 1968), 138, 140 (Michael Pointer).
The cast of Getting Atmosphere - 1912 includes: Bennie Bear as 1st Son Hobart Bosworth as The Director of the Mutoscope M.P.C. Elmer Clifton as 3rd Real Tramp Harry Ennis as 1st Real Tramp Phyllis Gordon as The Leading Lady William Hutchinson as A Farmer
An old-style peep show is often referred to as a "mutoscope." This early form of entertainment featured a series of photographs or moving images viewed through a peephole, allowing individuals to watch short films or performances privately. Mutoscopes were popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, often showcasing risqué content.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern MUT-S----. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter M and 2nd letter U and 3rd letter T and 5th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: mutoscope
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern -UT--C--E. That is, nine letter words with 2nd letter U and 3rd letter T and 6th letter C and 9th letter E. In alphabetical order, they are: mutoscope
Belle Boyd, a spy agent of the Confederacy, died long before the advent of Movies. it is conceivable film or films may have been done on her. there was a novel about the Rebel Rose, who died in the shipwreck of a Blockade Runner, thus did not survive the War, all this for Confederate Money- and the Honor of the South. The CSA had several Women spies in service. I believe Belle Boyd died in about l887. Movies were just coming out of the flip-card experimental mutoscope or kinetoscope then.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 6 words with the pattern --T--CO-E. That is, nine letter words with 3rd letter T and 6th letter C and 7th letter O and 9th letter E. In alphabetical order, they are: entrecote fetoscope mutoscope ostracode patercove vitascope
General Public. I believe the type that is most common were called Mutoscopes, made and marketed by International Mutoscope co,. and mostly crank operated. they were once a fixture in amusement arcades/ Turning the crank flipped the cards and produced the movie effect. a more sophisticated motor-driven type was used in the more sophisticated arcades and these often were shorts of boxing matches such as Sugar Ray Robinson, etc. These machines, both types survived well into the sixties and seventies as a sort of nostalgia-= rerun thing.