Hazel's Forest Mac OS
In my lab, I’ve got a couple of PowerEdge R610’s that include iDRAC interfaces for lights-out management. Unfortunately, the remote console is Java-based. They’re older servers (using the iDRAC 6 interface), and I hope that newer versions of the iDRAC console look more like 2016! The interface on my iDRAC 6 boxes is awful.
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Hazel is an absolutely killer tool for processing your paperless documents on your Mac. (File Juggler is great on Windows too.) We recommend creating a central folder to act as an inbox and have everything you can and download go to that folder. Hazel Mack, the former leader of Legal Aid of North Carolina (LANC), has been promoted as director of outreach at Wake Forest University School of Law. Mack has served as the interim director of outreach since October 2016. In this video I show you how to play PC games on MAC- MacBook: Parallels Desktop: Windows 10: https://amzn.
I’m a heavy OS X user, and as such I regularly run into problems with software that was designed with only the Windows user in mind. Using the remote console tool in my version of the iDRAC interface is a perfect example of this.
When I try to launch a remote console, a .jnlp file is downloaded. This is a Java Web Start file that would allow me to save it and run the file any time to access the remote console. The connection information is appended to the filename when the file is downloaded. See the example below.
I’ve never even seen this on a Windows machine, so it must be the case that the Java Web Start application on Windows knows how to handle this. But in the case of OS X, everything goes sideways. The extension isn’t recognized as .jnlp because of the additional periods in the IP address. OS X thinks this is a .12@atm-wi[…] file because it’s grabbing everything after the last period. As such, I can’t open the viewer without renaming the file.
For quite a while, I just dealt with this as another one of those things that I deal with for going against the grain when it comes to OS of choice. Each time I downloaded a new viewer, I would just go into my Downloads folder and rename the file, then launch it. But this morning I decided I didn’t want to deal with it anymore, so I came up with a fix.
If you’re an OS X user and you’ve never heard of Hazel, you’re missing out. Developed by the one-man team at Noodlesoft, Hazel is like a local IFTTT or Zapier. It’s mostly built for handling files, but you can have it kick off Applescript, Javascript, shell scripts, and more. Which means that really you can use files as triggers to automate just about anything with Hazel.
In this case, the fix is pretty simple. Chrome puts files that I download in my Downloads directory, so I just created a Hazel rule to watch the downloads folder for new remote console viewer files and rename them so that they work correctly. I tried to do this a while back with version 3 of Hazel, but I had a hard time because the filename is wonky and I couldn’t get the pattern matching right. Version 4 of Hazel was recently released, and it includes the ability to preview rule matching. Using the previews, I was able to make the correct rule in just a minute or two. But, I figured I’d share what I’m doing and save you the work. So behold! My Hazel rule for making iDRAC less of a pain to use on Mac.
This correctly identifies and renames these files to ‘iDRAC-Viewer-[increment counter to ensure uniqueness].jnlp’ Now after downloading, I can just go run the file like normal without screwing around with it 🙂
Hazel Mack, the former leader of Legal Aid of North Carolina (LANC), has been promoted as director of outreach at Wake Forest University School of Law. Mack has served as the interim director of outreach since October 2016.
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“I am pleased to announce that Hazel Mack has agreed to become our permanent director of outreach,” said Ann Gibbs, associate dean of Administration and Student Services. “As we predicted a year ago when she stepped in as interim director, Hazel’s passion for serving the underserved, her legal expertise from years of practice with Legal Aid and her deep connections within the Winston-Salem community make her the perfect leader for the Office of Outreach.”
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No stranger to the law school, Mack began working with Wake Forest Law students in the 1990s through The Legal Aid Society externship program and more recently with Professor Steve Virgil and the Community Law and Business Clinic.
“I look forward to continuing to work with law students on the impactful and important initiatives of both the Pro Bono Project and Public Interest Law programs,” Mack says.
Mack shaped her life around being able to help the less fortunate, practicing 35 years with LANC, where she focused on “helping poor clients deal with such issues as foreclosures, consumer scams and domestic violence” before retiring in March, the Winston-Salem Journal reported.
The Winston-Salem Journal reported that after attending Shaw University for about a year, Mack joined the Black Panther Party at the height of the civil rights movement. Along with Larry Little (JD ’88) and Nelson Malloy, Mack founded the Winston-Salem chapter of the Black Panther Party.
When describing her experience to Winston-Salem Monthly about her role with the Black Panthers, Mack stated, “we fed the hungry in the Free Breakfast Program, clothed those in need through the Free Clothing and Free Shoes programs, cared for the sick with the Free Ambulance Program and visited the imprisoned through the Free Transportation to Prison Program.”
Mack started at LANC in Wilson before moving to the Winston-Salem office, where she was eventually promoted from Senior Managing Attorney to Regional Managing Attorney.