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Holography is often used as a plot device in science fiction. However, very often, sci-fi movies and TV shows incorrectly present different 3D-projection technologies as "holography". ==In science fiction books== * ''The Carpathian Castle'' (1893 novel by ''Jules Verne''), the plot revolves around prima donna La Stilla, represented at the times of the events as a projected image. * ''Hello America'' (1981 book by ''J.G. Ballard''), holographic technology is used by president ''Charles Manson'' to scare nomad peoples along the ''United States of America'', showing images of American pop culture icons such as Gary Cooper, Mickey Mouse, or the Enterprise space ship. * ''En Iniya Iyanthira'' (1980s novel by ''Sujatha Rangarajan''), a character named Jeeva, who is the president of the country, is not real but a holographic image. * ''The Pixel Eye'' (2003 novel by Paul Levinson), holograms of living and deceased people play a major role. * ''Ultraviolet'' (2014 novel by Joseph Robert Lewis), the heroine Carmen Zhao uses solid holograms projected from her clothing as tools, vehicles, and weapons. * ''Holo.Wars: The Black Hats'' (2014 novel by R.M. Gonzales), chambers are using "holostereoscopy." * ''Expozium: The Secret'' (2014 script by V. Hanacik), The key technology plays role of breakthrought, its sferic future cinema using "holointerféric" patterns. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Holography in fiction」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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