Struggling with the slow Windows search bar? Learn how the Everything tool indexes millions of files instantly to find your data without the lag.

Real breakthrough comes from changing the framework entirely; you aren't limited by your hardware, but by the logic the software is using.
The "Everything" utility achieves near-instant results by changing the framework of how it searches. Instead of scanning the actual contents of files—which is a slow, linear process—it indexes the Master File Table (MFT) on NTFS drives. By reading this "map" of the file system directly into the computer's RAM, the software can locate filenames and attributes almost instantly without having to physically search through every folder or document.
First Principles Thinking involves breaking a problem down to its most fundamental, bedrock truths rather than relying on analogies or established "best practices." In the script, this is illustrated by the developer of the "Everything" tool asking what the most basic way to identify a file's location is (the MFT), rather than simply trying to make existing content-indexing methods faster. It allows for "paradigm shifts" where the entire logic of a system is updated to overcome previous bottlenecks.
Mental models are intellectual tools or frameworks from various disciplines—such as biology, physics, and economics—that help explain how the world works. Charlie Munger suggests that isolated facts are useless unless they hang together on a "latticework" of these models. By using multiple lenses, such as "Incentive-Caused Bias" or "Systems Thinking," a person can triangulate reality and avoid the "man with a hammer" syndrome, where one tries to solve every complex problem with only one specific tool or viewpoint.
"Normal Science" is described as a stable period of "puzzle-solving" where researchers work within an established framework or directory of knowledge. However, when "anomalies" or unexplained data points pile up, the system enters a crisis. A "Paradigm Shift" occurs when the old framework is discarded in favor of a new one that can account for these anomalies. This shift often requires a completely different language or logic that may be "incommensurable" with the previous way of thinking.
Inversion is a mental model that involves looking at a problem backward. Instead of asking how to achieve a positive goal, you ask what would guarantee a negative outcome. For example, to improve productivity, you would identify everything that ensures unproductivity—such as constant phone distractions or saying yes to every meeting—and then create a "Not-to-Do List." This helps identify and remove bottlenecks that are often invisible when only focusing on positive steps.
Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
