Marcus almost smiled. “You might survive.”
Her heart hammered. She opened the change order module. She selected the main frame, the vents, the sills. She applied the new RAL. Logikal paused. A spinning wheel. A warning: “Foil substitution: Non-standard. Additional lamination time +3 days. Additional cost +€87.”
Sarah took a breath. She stopped forcing it. Instead, she clicked the “Auto-Solve” button. Logikal suggested a different mullion profile, one with a stepped capillary tube for pressure equalization. She accepted. The red mark vanished. The model rotated smoothly.
She opened a new project. Customer: Whitmore. Job: Victorian Bay. orgadata logikal training
The screen glowed a soft blue in the dim training room. Sarah tapped her pen against her notebook, staring at the login page for Logikal. Around her, five other new hires at the window and door fabrication plant did the same. The air smelled of stale coffee and new plastic.
He clicked his mouse. A 3D model of a casement window appeared on the main screen, rotating slowly.
“A very expensive piece of German engineering?” she guessed. Marcus almost smiled
Sarah looked back at her screen. The Victorian bay window sat there, every screw, every seal, every millimeter of drip cap accounted for. It wasn’t just a drawing. It was a promise.
“Logikal isn’t just a configurator. It’s a truth-teller. You lie to it? It knows.”
Then came the mullions.
Tomorrow, she’d learn about the hinge calculator. Today, she’d learned that in the world of Orgadata, precision wasn’t a virtue. It was the only option.
A collective groan.
“It’s a contract. You give it perfect data. It gives you a perfect window, a perfect price, a perfect cutting list. No handshake deals. No ‘make it work on site.’ It’s the opposite of a carpenter’s pencil. That’s scary. But it’s also… peaceful.” She selected the main frame, the vents, the sills