The band's members were Roger Miller (guitar), Clint Conley (bass guitar), Erik Lindgren (keyboards) ), and Boby Bear (drums); all but Bear shared songwriting and singing duties.
Museum of the Moving Image | Moving Picture Experts Group | Howl's Moving Castle | Moving the Mountain | Fast-moving consumer goods | Moving to Opportunity | Moving the Mountain (1994 film) | 2013 Federated Auto Parts 400 | The Moving Toyshop | Spare Parts | Parts-per notation | Parts & Labor | Moving to New York | Moving Picture Company | Moving (Kate Bush song) | Moving Hearts | Moving | Juhan Parts | Interchangeable parts | Checker O'Reilly Auto Parts 500km | Australian Centre for the Moving Image | 2008 Checker Auto Parts 500 | Zeitgeist: Moving Forward | Victory Parts | Travelling Without Moving | Travelling without Moving | The Moving Picture World | The Moving Arts Film Journal | The lower parts of the walls of the 16th century dining hall of St John's College, Cambridge | Summation by parts |
In 2012, Wool contributed the set design for Moving Parts, a piece conceived by Benjamin Millepied's L.A. Dance Project.
ConsERV's value is demonstrated in the form of an energy recovery a device which pretreats the incoming fresh air to a building using the energy found in the exhaust air steam using no moving parts to lower the energy and carbon footprint of existing forms of heating and cooling equipment Polymer membranes can be designed to selectively allow particles of one size and shape to pass through while preventing others of different dimensions.
The analysis which led to the concept of entropy began with the work of French mathematician Lazare Carnot who in his 1803 paper Fundamental Principles of Equilibrium and Movement proposed that in any machine the accelerations and shocks of the moving parts represent losses of moment of activity.
Ionocraft, a device that can generate thrust using ionised air with no moving parts
In November 2013, the Museum opened 5000 Moving Parts, a year-long exhibition of kinetic art, featuring the work of Ganson, Anne Lilly, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, John Douglas Powers, and Takis.
A group of researchers from McGill University Canada designed several digital musical instruments in the form of moving parts of the body like the Rib and spine.
They are typically made of cardboard, and may range from large self-standing posters to three-dimensional devices with moving parts and lights.