Unifying-the-systems Access

The phrase is most famously associated with Garry Tonon , a world-class grappling champion and mixed martial artist. It refers to his comprehensive instructional series focused on connecting different submission "systems" (like leg locks, back attacks, and front headlocks) into one fluid game.

Better analytics from seeing how different data points interact. 🧠 The Philosophical Piece: "System 1 vs. System 2"

Depending on your interest—whether you're a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) athlete, a developer, or a philosopher—here are a few ways to interpret and "come up with a piece" for this concept: 🥋 The Grappling Piece: "The Connective Tissue" unifying-the-systems

Integrate independent platforms (like Access Control and Video Surveillance ) into one interface. The Benefit: Efficiency: Reduce "toggle tax" (switching between apps).

Philosophical "binding" theories suggest our diverse senses (like touch) aren't separate, but function together to bind features into a single experience . The phrase is most famously associated with Garry

Use your opponent's defense against System A to automatically put them into System B.

If you are writing or training for BJJ, your "piece" should focus on , which Garry Tonon calls the "connective tissue" of grappling. 🧠 The Philosophical Piece: "System 1 vs

Example: If they hide their heel during a leg attack, they often expose their back or an arm for a Kimura transition . 💻 The Tech/Dev Piece: "The Unified Dashboard"