The lost work of Hamlet at Horodec has been quoted. With seemingly unlimited possibilities in the transfer of computer technology from the industrial technology field to the communication field proved to be exciting and distracting. Artists and storytellers are particularly interested in new features in technology development; the way computers provide information is the way they become innovative tools for self-expression. Among the books by Holodeck's "Hamlet", author Janet Murray discusses the challenge of dealing creative with digital environments.
Janet Murray talks about this trend and how Virtual Reality affects our daily life in Holodeck's "Hamlet" book. But what is Horodec? That's a good question. Holodeck is a fictitious virtual reality that introduces the world of Star Trek. This is a place where people can relax and the environment simulates familiar places. This place can also be used as a training facility. So basically it is a complete simulation space, you can imagine anything that might be reality. It was always a fictional idea that many writers and filmmakers discussed before simulation became possible. So, Ray Bradbury talked about this in the 1951 short story series "Illustrator". In one of the stories "The Veldt", children's nursery schools can create objects based on ideas. Sounds good. But what if we were to achieve the idea of perfect simulation?
My second myth, Holodeck, was proposed by a theorist as a model for forming stories in a multi-sensory, three-dimensional, interactive virtual environment. Its main supporter is Horodec 's famous book "Hamlet", Janet Murray. Holodeck's idea was born from the popular TV series "Star Trek". It is a VR cave where the crew of the Starship "Corporate" retreats for relaxation and entertainment. In this cave the computer carries out a three-dimensional simulation of the fictitious world and visitors call us us as "interactors". This is the role of digital fiction. Through the interaction between the human actor and the virtual character created by the computer, a novel plot is generated 'on the job'. According to Murray, becoming a character in the novel will be a fun learning experience. "Like all literary experiences, Horodec has potential value in this field.