Oculus Rift allows dying woman to fulfil her last wish
IT’S been predicted to change the world, but for one lady this piece of gaming technology already has when it fulfilled her dying wish.
FACEBOOK made it clear that it thinks that Oculus Rift can change the world when it purchased Oculus VR for $2 billion last month. And, for one woman, it already has.
Roberta Firstenberg was diagnosed with a form of cancer that made her too weak to get up and go for a walk. One of her last wishes was to go outside and so her granddaughter Priscilla, a video game artist, sent a note to Oculus asking whether they could help.
Oculus VR is a virtual reality technology that allows people to experience things in a completely immersive way.
“Oculus’s mission is to enable you to experience the impossible,” said Mark Zuckerberg when he purchased the technology back in March. “Their technology opens up the possibility of completely new kinds of experiences.”
So when the support team at Oculus VR got Priscilla’s note they put together a demo of all the things Firstenberg loved, like butterflies and waterfalls, and sent her a demo kit allowing her to experience what she loved in life just one more time.
Mrs Firstenberg passed away four weeks after using Oculus Rift for the first time.
If Oculus Rift and VR can already provide therapy in situations like this, who knows what the future holds for this industry.