So he pressed the button.
His coffee went cold.
Project awake. Awaiting input.
The workstation fans roared. Klaus’s old USB mouse cursor began moving on its own—slowly, deliberately—dragging a wire from the phantom valve toward the main power feed. Klaus grabbed the mouse. It twitched against his palm. He yanked the USB cord. The cursor kept moving. eplan 2.6
But EPLAN 2.6 had other plans.
In the fluorescent-lit silence of a control systems lab, an aging engineer named Klaus powered up EPLAN 2.6 for what he swore was the last time. The software’s interface—dated, gray, and stubborn as cast iron—loaded with a crackle from the old workstation’s speakers. Klaus had built three factories from these schematics. Now, the company wanted everything migrated to the cloud. “One last project,” he told the empty chair beside him. “A water treatment plant. Simple.” So he pressed the button