ClearMind

ClearMind

A software that can really let AI clean up the C drive

4 followers

C: drive full of cryptic files you're afraid to delete? ClearMind is your AI 'technical translator,' turning confusion into clear choices to safely reclaim gigabytes. Ready to see it in action? Download the ZIP, extract, and run theexe to find out!
ClearMind gallery image
ClearMind gallery image
ClearMind gallery image
ClearMind gallery image
Free
Launch Team / Built With
AssemblyAI
AssemblyAI
Build voice AI apps with a single API
Promoted

What do you think? …

TomChen
Maker
📌
Hey Product Hunt community! I'm the creator of ClearMind. Like many of you, my C: drive was a graveyard of mysterious folders and files. Cache from uninstalled apps, cryptic logs, leftover SDKs... I knew there were gigabytes of wasted space, but deleting anything felt like defusing a bomb. One wrong move, and the system might break. I kept asking myself: "Why can't something just explain what this stuff is in plain language?" That's the core idea behind ClearMind. It's not just another file cleaner that shows you a list of large files. It's a 'technical translator' powered by AI. What makes it unique? We use the analytical power of a Large Language Model (like Gemini) to analyze your system's file structure and registry data. It doesn't just look at file extensions; it understands the relationships between files, folders, and installed programs. Then, it presents its findings not as a dry list, but as clear, actionable "decision cards" with plain-language explanations. What am I most proud of? The "Executor-Brain" architecture. All scanning and file operations happen strictly on your local machine for privacy and security. Only the anonymized, structured data is sent to the AI "Brain" for analysis. And our guiding principle is absolute safety: every deletion is just a move to the Windows Recycle Bin. Nothing is permanently lost. ClearMind is designed to empower you to take back control of your disk space with knowledge and confidence. I'm here all day to answer your questions! I'd love to hear your thoughts. What's the most mysterious folder on your PC right now?