Corridors are everywhere – in office buildings, hospitals, warehouses, data centers, subway tunnels, and even digital networks. Yet traditional grouping algorithms (e.g., first-in-first-out, round-robin, or static zoning) fail to account for the unique dynamics of narrow, linear environments. Congestion, deadlocks, and inefficient space utilization are rampant.
They gather on the stained carpet near vending machine №20. Someone has taped a note to the snack dispenser: “Better.” No one knows what it means. Ruby Fiut tries to parse it: > Better.define → (undefined method 'better' for nil:NilClass) glebokiegardlogrubyfiutgrupowanakorytarzu20 better
And the note remains: “better.”