![]() Restart, on the other hand, clears the RAM and the processor cache. ![]() Not surprising that being unable to refresh the mind for many days in a row, as with humans, might lead to mistakes creeping into the software, manifesting as unwanted behavior. Nerds such as myself will likely relate this to the 2003 run of Battlestar Galactica (episode title “33”), or Star Trek: The Next Generation (episode title “Night Terrors”). In human terms, it would be like taking a catnap when what you really needed was a lengthy sleep complete with plenty of REM cycles. Shut down writes the contents of memory to a file, which it then quickly reloads into memory when you turn the computer back on. ![]() Sure, it’s way faster, but there is a reason for that: Shutting down the computer and then turning it back on, especially if the fast boot option is enabled in Windows 10 (which it likely is, by default) is not the same as Restart/reboot. īut beware… “restart” may no longer mean what you think it means! It certainly isn’t what it used to be. Restart SOLIDWORKS, and if that didn’t resolve it then restart/reboot the computer. ![]() When troubleshooting unwanted behavior on a computer, especially when running SOLIDWORKS, there are a couple of simple steps worth trying early in the process.
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