O — Organise
Give Majk a pile of information with no structure — a folder of files with cryptic names, a set of inconsistently formatted reports, a downloads folder that's been accumulating for years — and it reads what's actually in each item, understands the content, and creates an organisation that makes everything findable and clear. It's like one of those messy-closet makeovers you see on TV, except it works on your entire computer.
- 847 files in Downloads. Majk opens each one, figures out what it actually is, and builds a folder structure that fits your specific mix — not a generic template.
- 600 holiday photos named IMG_4392.jpg. Majk looks at each image to see what's in it — a sunset, a market, a face — and renames them for what you'd actually search for.
- "final_v3_REAL.pdf", "download(1).pdf", "untitled.pdf". Majk reads every one and renames them — "chen-2024-q3-invoice.pdf", "lease-oak-st-2023.pdf". Named for what they contain.
- Hundreds of files you haven't opened in years. Majk reads them all and writes a plain-English index — find anything without opening a single file.
One sentence, and a folder that's been bothering you for years is fixed. That's a good first day.
What's next
Let's put O to work. You'll tell Majk to sort your photo library and watch it figure out the structure on its own.