-win- ... — .net Reflector Professional V11.1.0.2169

Leo switched to . One of the killer features in this version—the ability to step into decompiled code as if it were original source. He attached the debugger to the running Windows service, set a breakpoint on GetApproximateRoadDistance , and watched the stack trace unwind. The method was returning straight-line Euclidean distance, then multiplying by 1.6. "Approximate," indeed.

[INFO] RouteOptimizer: Using ModernRouteOptimizer [INFO] Delivery ETA: 6.2 hours (previous: 8.7 hours) Leo leaned back. The trial still had three days left, but he didn’t need them. He opened the company credit card form and typed: .NET Reflector Professional v11.1.0.2169 – 1 license – perpetual with one year maintenance. .NET Reflector Professional v11.1.0.2169 -Win- ...

He dragged RouteOptimizer.Core.dll into the workspace. Leo switched to

At 4:47 PM, he recompiled. The Windows service restarted. Logs scrolled: The trial still had three days left, but

He right-clicked. . v11.1.0.2169 opened a new tab showing a call graph—red lines for missing references, green for internal. A blue node glowed: LegacyGPSBridge.GetApproximateRoadDistance . No implementation. Just a P/Invoke to a 32-bit unmanaged DLL.

Leo opened Visual Studio, then launched . The splash screen appeared—a familiar deep blue with the stylized magnifying glass over a C# bracket. "Loading assembly cache," it said. Then, "Ready."