Their flagship product—a logistics tracker for intermodal freight—was running on SQL Server 2000 Standard Edition. The database had grown to 350GB. Every night, the indexing job took four hours. Every morning, the dispatchers in Chicago and Rotterdam would sit staring at spinning hourglasses while containers piled up at ports.
On go-live morning, the Union Pacific dispatcher in Omaha pulled up the dashboard. It loaded in 0.3 seconds. He blinked, refreshed, and called Lena: “What did you do?” sql server 2005 enterprise
That night, Lena and her junior admin, Marcus, installed the new instance on a dual-socket Itanium server—a beast of a machine that had been gathering dust in the data center. Every morning, the dispatchers in Chicago and Rotterdam
That winter, Northwind Solutions signed the contract. The CEO bought Lena a bottle of Macallan 18. Marcus got a raise. He blinked, refreshed, and called Lena: “What did you do
“That’s... illegal,” Marcus whispered.
Lena shook her head. “No. This is the Enterprise handshake. Watch.”