Global Network Management under Spatial Grasp Paradigm

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Peter Simon Sapaty
Peter Simon Sapaty

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Global Network Management under Spatial Grasp Paradigm

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Abstract

The paper describes basics of high-level management model and technology for dealing with large distributed human or technical systems which can be represented as dynamic physical-virtual networks covering any terrestrial or celestial environments. The main technology component, Spatial Grasp Language (SGL), allows us to obtain powerful and compact spatial solutions of different problems by directly expressing their top semantics while hiding traditional system organization and management routines inside efficient networked implementation. Different network creation, evolution, matching, and transformation approaches are investigated and shown in SGL on general networks, which may be practically useful in a variety of areas influencing the dangerously growing world dynamics and caused, for example, by climate change, military, religious and ethnic conflicts, terrorism, refugee flows, weapons proliferation, political and industrial restructuring, growing inequality, economic instability, global insecurity, and very recently, due to the world-wide pandemic horror.

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Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Peter Simon Sapaty. 2020. \u201cGlobal Network Management under Spatial Grasp Paradigm\u201d. Global Journal of Research in Engineering - J: General Engineering GJRE-J Volume 20 (GJRE Volume 20 Issue J5): .

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Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/gjre

Print ISSN 0975-5861

e-ISSN 2249-4596

Keywords
Classification
GJRE-J Classification: FOR Code: 091599
Version of record

v1.2

Issue date

October 14, 2020

Language
en
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The paper describes basics of high-level management model and technology for dealing with large distributed human or technical systems which can be represented as dynamic physical-virtual networks covering any terrestrial or celestial environments. The main technology component, Spatial Grasp Language (SGL), allows us to obtain powerful and compact spatial solutions of different problems by directly expressing their top semantics while hiding traditional system organization and management routines inside efficient networked implementation. Different network creation, evolution, matching, and transformation approaches are investigated and shown in SGL on general networks, which may be practically useful in a variety of areas influencing the dangerously growing world dynamics and caused, for example, by climate change, military, religious and ethnic conflicts, terrorism, refugee flows, weapons proliferation, political and industrial restructuring, growing inequality, economic instability, global insecurity, and very recently, due to the world-wide pandemic horror.

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Global Network Management under Spatial Grasp Paradigm

Peter Simon Sapaty
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