The procedure was developed by Embraer, Rolls Royce and ExpressJet (at the time, Continental Express) when they were experiencing an average of one uncommaded engine shutdown per week. It was determined that the FADECs were getting bogged down with miscellaneous, unneeded codes during each engine start. Like your computer when the hard drive gets full, it bogged down the FADECs causing them to eventually shutdown, which shuts down the engine. It was found that the COEX crews were just alternating the FADECs (per EMB procedures) after engine start. Going to RESET cleared the codes and things were fine after that. It was procedure that the FADECs were alternated in such a way that the A FADEC had control going from a HUB (Away) and the B FADEC had control going into a hub (Back). They switched on their own during each start, but that's how XJT did it.