Hazel automates your file cleanup

I usually find myself wondering if I’m the only person who uses my desktop as a staging area for the files and projects I’m working on.  Once I’m done with them I throw them into the appropriate files, make backups where necessary, and then start all over again.  It’s been a pretty handy approach, but I occasionally find myself surfing for something I accidentally deleted, because I’ve gotten carried away in my cleanup process.  Well, now we can avoid the problem, and more specifically, we can automate our file cleanup from around the desktop with Hazel.

Hazel’s kind of like Automator, in the sense that it lets you set a number of criteria so you can ensure that you’re affecting the right files, then it lets you set up a series of tasks to perform on them.  For instance, in my download folder I have a ton of zip files.  Most of them are from application downloads, and it’s become really annoying manually deleting them, so instead, I have Hazel checking to see if the .zip files haven’t been opened in a couple days, then it moves them to the trash can if they meet my criteria.

There’s a host of options, and a ton of ways you can bend Hazel to your will.  It’s a productivity godsend, and frankly, you shouldn’t have to worry about how to manage your computer.  You computer should manage itself, it’s 2009 for goodness sakes, it’s about time an application exists like Hazel.

Joshua is the Content Marketing Manager at BuySellAds. He’s also the founder of Macgasm.net. And since all that doesn’t quite give him enough content to wrangle, he’s also a technology journalist in his spare time, with bylines at PCWorld, Macworld… Full Bio