• u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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    545 months ago

    Especially considering the use of off-the-shelf Snapdragon 801.

    There’s some nice discussion about Ingenuity here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26177619

    …This processor will have not flips on Mars, possibly up to every few minutes. Their solution is to hold two copies of memory and double check operations as much as possible, and if any difference is detected they simply reboot. Ingenuity will start to fall out of the sky, but it can go through a full reboot and come back online in a few hundred milliseconds to continue flying.
    -jhurliman

        • Rhaedas
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          165 months ago

          During a flight is a bit much, but some aircraft have a reboot between flights as a standard procedure to fix glitches that would happen if the plane was left on for the entire time.

            • Rhaedas
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              25 months ago

              Nothing that high level. Different systems are running independently, some may be redundant to each other in case one fails. But run something long enough especially in extreme conditions and things can drift from the baselines. If a power off and on regularly prevents that it’s a lot easier than trying to chase down gremlins that could be different each time they pop up for different reasons.

              Even NASA I believe has done such resets from Apollo through the unmanned probes from time to time. Mentioning Windows, the newest versions don’t really do this baseline reset if you just shut them down, even if you disable the hibernate/sleep modes, while a restart does.

        • SharkAttak
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          65 months ago

          “Tower, we have some problems”
          “Have you tried turning it off and on again?”

        • Dettweiler
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          35 months ago

          You’d be surprised. We only do that on the ground, though.