

Then, create a new folder in your Dropbox. Point the Zapier action at the correct folder on your Dropbox, and make sure it’s set to “include file contents.” Photo: Cult of Macįirst, sign up at Zapier, if you haven’t already.

All you need to do is sign up for an account (it’s free to join, with limitations), and point it at your own Dropbox. This is super-simple, because Zapier already has an action set up to do it. Zapier is like a pro version of IFTTT, with a lot more control, better features, and far, far less home-automation crap.įor today’s how-to, we’re going to use Zapier to turn a folder of audio files in your Dropbox into a podcast RSS feed. Long-time readers will be familiar with If This Then That, or IFTT, a great service that connects other web services to each other, enabling automation.
