An hour later, she had imported the BIM model of floor 14. The interface was a mess of sliders and raw code, but she found the "3D Panel View" button. She clicked it.
She gasped.
"Don't look for flash," she would say. "Look for the truth. And bring your own coffee."
The software groaned. The lag was brutal. But slowly, the yellow cube moved two meters to the left, rotated 15 degrees, and rose 30 centimeters. She watched the collision warnings turn from red to orange, then green.
The blueprint for the "Aurora Smart Tower" was spread across her desk like a flat, dead insect. On paper, the conduit runs were perfect. The breaker panels were logically placed. The grounding paths were textbook. But in reality, on floor 14 of the half-built skyscraper, nothing fit.