The best part is rebooting 15 times actually does fix the issue sometimes.
As a tech enthusiast, this doesn’t surprise me one bit; one of my most used repair techniques is to do nothing and wait. A lot of problems just go away by themselves. But I’m still very curious how the 16th reboot was fixing that bluescreen.
I think the reasoning was that there was a race condition between the code causing the bluescreen and the code updating to avoid the bluescreen so rebooting 15 times would give a lot of opportunities for the updater to win the race.
But if it was a race condition, then some computers would just boot normally. I didn’t see anyone report that the issue was happening selectively. And that wouldn’t even be fix, just a one-off boot. Unless the file is removed the issue will come back on next reboot.
Nah. The best solution is to shut down, unplug it, wait 10 seconds, plug it back in, then boot it back up. A good tech will say 30s or even a minute, because they know you’re not going to count the 10 seconds.
The goal here is to clear the capacitors, most of which will drain within that 10s.