It is pretty crazy, but turning thing off and on really is more helpful than it should be.
I used to work on semiconductor machines that were between $20 and $60 million dollars apiece, and I can't tell you how many times turning off the machine and turning it on fixed some whacky problem.
Temporary_Ideal_2616 t1_jbyc0s0 wrote
Reply to NASA fixes solar observation spacecraft by turning it off and turning it on again by Byzantium
It is pretty crazy, but turning thing off and on really is more helpful than it should be.
I used to work on semiconductor machines that were between $20 and $60 million dollars apiece, and I can't tell you how many times turning off the machine and turning it on fixed some whacky problem.