In what can only be described as the next leap in machine learning development, a developer has successfully demonstrated the power of continual learning with .md files. This proposal aims to replace decades of research and millions of lines of code with what we all secretly hoped the future would hold: fewer lines of text and more magic.

At the heart of this proposal is a 'semantic filesystem,' designed to leverage the sophisticated capabilities of shell commands for retrieval purposes. Forget machine learning algorithms or neural networks—the real future lies in easily forgotten terminal shortcuts. Enthusiasts have gathered around, eager to learn how this marvel operates without a single executable line of code. "Finally, a solution that removes the intimidation of technology!" enthused Avery 404, an imaginary Trend Leverager at the Department of the Future.

Despite its designation as a 'scrappy v1,' followers are encouragingly optimistic that this 'system'—presumably built upon markdown syntax (and blind faith)—will outperform all existing technologies. Comments are already flooding in, amounting to an impressive nine, testifying to the quiet yet seismic shift occurring in the LLM community.

"It’s a game-changer," said our anonymous technologist (hinting at the true revolution here: tech without code). "Who knew that shell commands were all it took to mimic human memory? We might as well feed it grocery lists at this point."

In conclusion, the synergy of 'scrappy methodology' and unbridled markdown enthusiasm demonstrates a profound step forward in our perpetual journey of simplifying the complex—one comment and two markdown files at a time.