Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Fourble is a lightweight tool that turns a list of online MP3 files into a podcast RSS feed. Users provide an ordered set of MP3 files hosted on any website, or simply paste an archive.org collection URL, and Fourble generates a subscribable, shareable podcast page and RSS address. It does not host audio files itself; instead, it organizes externally hosted files for podcast distribution.
Fourble’s core feature is publishing audio on a user-defined schedule, such as releasing one episode every 7 days. The frequency or starting position can also be adjusted via parameters in the RSS URL. It supports both public podcasts and “private” podcasts: the latter do not appear on the homepage or in directories and are not indexed by search engines, but anyone who knows or can guess the RSS address can still listen. In practice, this is more like an unlisted link than strongly authenticated access control. After setting a password during creation, users can edit the podcast later. Older podcasts can also be marked as superseded and pointed to a newer replacement version. In terms of ecosystem, the site explicitly supports automatically pulling details from archive.org and outputs standard RSS compatible with podcast clients.
The site states that Fourble is operated and maintained for free by Kevan Davis. Users who find it useful can support it by “buy me a coffee”. There are no visible commercial plans, enterprise editions, APIs, SDKs, or self-hosting options. Documentation is mainly provided on the About page in FAQ form, covering RSS URLs, private podcasts, editing, caching, invalid feeds, and copyright handling. It is clear enough for regular users, but it is not structured developer-oriented technical documentation.
The advantages are that the workflow is simple, free, and especially well suited to listening through large collections of old radio shows or audio archives on archive.org at a controlled pace, without downloading everything at once or managing files manually. The drawbacks are also clear: audio availability depends entirely on external sources, so renamed or removed files will immediately affect subscriptions; RSS caching can take up to 24 hours, so changes are not instant; and the service is personally maintained, with limited guarantees around support and stability.
Fourble is suitable for individual users, audio archive organizers, fans of old radio programs, and anyone who needs to turn a set of MP3 files into a podcast subscription. It is not suitable for teams that need access control, commercial SLAs, API integration, or self-hosting. Access from mainland China is not mentioned in the source text and should be considered unknown. If the podcast depends on external audio sources such as archive.org, real-world usability will also depend on the network availability of those source sites. As an alternative, the text mentions Huffduffer for individual audio items.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on fourble.co.uk official site.
fourble.co.uk is an United Kingdom Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach fourble.co.uk directly.