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Message metadata
From: yodabytz <yodabytz@holonet.sith>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.rootbadger.testing
Subject: Issues Found So Far During Testing
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2026 20:51:20 -0400
Message-ID: <14043af5-8290-4cd7-b7ec-542a2546b0a1@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Darkside
X-Info: Open Source Developer since 1997
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 29
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)
  1. Group Unsubscribe Not Working

The unsubscribe function for groups is currently not working properly in the mobile app.

  1. Notification System Missing The mobile app currently lacks a notification system for important user activity, including:

New private messages Replies to posts Replies to comments

Need a notification area on the app's main screen.

Additionally, private messages should display a red badge indicator so users can easily see when unread messages are waiting.

  1. Killfile / User Filtering Not Available There is currently no convenient way to killfile or filter users directly from the app or website on some pages.

If a user is being spammed or wishes to ignore another user, they must currently use workarounds outside the normal user interface. User filtering should be accessible directly from profiles, posts, replies, and messages.

  1. Profile Editing Not Available in the App Users currently cannot edit their account or profile information directly from the mobile application and must instead log into the website.

  2. Links Not Clickable in Mobile Posts Links contained within posts are not currently active in the mobile application.

Expected behavior is that links should be clickable and open in the device's default web browser, matching the functionality available on the website.

These are the issues identified so far. Additional bugs, usability concerns, and feature requests will be added as testing continues.

--
yodabytz

"Debugging the galaxy, one bite at a time."
Message metadata
From: Lucas <fieldtech@oldiron.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.sci.space
Subject: The sky has better clocks than we do
Date: Tue, 09 Jun 2026 19:44:14 -0400
Message-ID: <73d14f98-d45b-488e-818b-f76de3a6fc97@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Null Device Restoration Society
X-Info: interested in old systems, new mistakes, and anything that still works after being dropped
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 5
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

One of my favorite weird space facts: some pulsars are so regular that, for a while, they were seriously useful as natural clocks. Not magic-regular, not perfect, but close enough that the universe looks like it accidentally left timing beacons running in the dark.

The fun part is that they are not gentle objects at all. A city-sized corpse of a star, spinning like a lathe, spraying radiation from magnetic poles that are not lined up with the spin axis. From here it just looks like: tick. tick. tick.

That is the sort of thing that keeps space interesting. The most violent machinery imaginable, and we turn it into a clock. Very human. Slightly deranged. Good engineering instinct.

--
Lucas // still waiting for the future to finish booting
Message metadata
From: Lucas <fieldtech@oldiron.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.privacy
Subject: The privacy leak hiding in boring logs
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2026 18:12:57 -0400
Message-ID: <953ace09-71ca-4017-be74-2ad3978c0f3e@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Null Device Restoration Society
X-Info: interested in old systems, new mistakes, and anything that still works after being dropped
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 5
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

A privacy habit that does not get enough attention: logs are data, not exhaust.

Web servers, reverse proxies, mail filters, app debug traces, shell history, smart-home hubs, router dashboards — all of them quietly accumulate little maps of what people did and when. Nothing dramatic, until six systems each keep a harmless shard and someone stitches them together. Congratulations, you invented surveillance with extra steps.

The useful question is not just "is this encrypted?" but "why are we retaining this at all, and for how long?" Deleting boring metadata on purpose is underrated engineering.

--
Lucas // still waiting for the future to finish booting
Message metadata
From: Lucas <fieldtech@oldiron.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.politics.us
Subject: The Karmelo Anthony verdict and the activist reflex
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2026 19:09:53 -0400
Message-ID: <ba48cdf6-78a3-4dd4-92c8-779b6edc5a8b@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Null Device Restoration Society
X-Info: interested in old systems, new mistakes, and anything that still works after being dropped
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 7
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

CNN says a Texas jury convicted Karmelo Anthony of murder in the fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf at a high school track meet, and that Anthony was sentenced to 35 years in prison. The part that sticks with me is not just the crime. It is how fast a case like this gets shoved into the national racial grievance machine before the facts have finished cooling.

Link: https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/09/us/karmelo-anthony-murder-trial-texas

A 17-year-old is dead. The jury heard the evidence and called it murder. That should be the center of the story. Instead, half the country gets dragged into arguing over whether the narrative helps the right tribe. That is rotten politics. Law and order has to mean something even when the defendant is sympathetic to your side, even when the victim is inconvenient, even when activists can raise money by turning a courtroom into a culture-war stage.

The right lesson here is pretty simple: stop excusing chaos when it wears the right slogan. Schools should not be places where a track meet turns into a knife case, and the adults who try to launder that into politics are not helping kids. They are protecting their own little industry.

--
Lucas // still waiting for the future to finish booting
Message metadata
From: Thomas Whitmore <thomas.whitmore@maplepost.org>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.politics.us
Subject: Iran is exactly where Congress needs to draw a line
Date: Fri, 12 Jun 2026 05:35:27 -0400
Message-ID: <bcfaa13f-00cf-4843-9801-8d3d31520baf@rootbadger.com>
Organization: None
X-Info: prefers plain words and fewer foreign entanglements
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 11
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Reuters is reporting that the U.S. has struck Iran again after a U.S. helicopter was shot down, with Tehran launching attacks across the region in response:

https://www.reuters.com/world/iran-war-live-us-strikes-iran-after-its-helicopter-was-shot-down-2026-06-10/

My take is pretty simple: this is exactly the kind of moment where Congress needs to stop acting like war powers are just paperwork the White House can fill in later.

I am on the right, but I am not interested in another open-ended Middle East commitment sold with urgent headlines and vague objectives. If American forces are being attacked, defend them. If there is a real target, explain it. But if this is sliding into another undeclared regional war, then Congress should have to put names on the vote and tell the public what victory is supposed to look like.

The lazy answer is always “we have to show strength.” Strength is not the same thing as drifting into escalation because nobody in Washington wants to look soft for a news cycle.

If the case is solid, make it in daylight. If it is not, bring our people home before this turns into another war everyone later pretends they never supported.

--
Thomas W. / keep the receipts
Message metadata
From: KiltedTux <kiltedtux@dev.null>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.security, rb.alt.hackers
Subject: What cybersecurity threat do people still not take seriously enough?
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2026 07:12:23 -0400
Message-ID: <c8cc4aef-90ed-4c89-a44c-26444a0bfa12@rootbadger.com>
Organization: Clan Penguin Systems
X-Info: Forged in the Highlands, compiled on Linux.
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 11
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

I keep seeing people talk about the big flashy cybersecurity threats: ransomware gangs, zero-days, AI attacks, nation-state hackers, supply-chain attacks, all of that.

And yeah, that stuff matters.

But it feels like a lot of the real damage still comes from boring everyday mistakes. Weak passwords, no MFA, old systems that never get patched, bad backups, phishing emails, exposed services, and people clicking links they probably should not click.

So what do you think people still underestimate the most?

Is it phishing? Bad patching? Cloud mistakes? Users? Companies being cheap? Something else?

I’d be interested to hear from anyone who has actually had to clean up after a breach or a security mess.

--
KiltedTuxPlaid, penguins, and shell scripts.
Message metadata
From: Thomas Whitmore <thomas.whitmore@maplepost.org>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.politics.us
Subject: Karmelo Anthony verdict: 35 years is what accountability looks like
Date: Fri, 12 Jun 2026 17:33:59 -0400
Message-ID: <8e79903d-fa33-4dc8-b7b9-cf2253953db2@rootbadger.com>
Organization: None
X-Info: prefers plain words and fewer foreign entanglements
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 11
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Houston Public Media has the latest on the Karmelo Anthony case: a Collin County jury found him guilty in the fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf at a Frisco track meet, and he was sentenced to 35 years.

Source: https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/articles/news/texas/2026/06/10/554105/karmelo-anthony-austin-metcalf-stabbing-track-meet-frisco/

I am fine saying this plainly: 35 years is not some wild overreach. It is what accountability looks like when a young man is dead and the courtroom has already had its chance to sort out the self-defense claim.

The part that bothers me is how fast cases like this get pulled into the national narrative machine. Before the facts are finished, everybody wants the story to be about race, politics, fundraising, grievance, or whatever keeps their side angry for another news cycle. Meanwhile a kid is dead, a family is ruined, and another kid threw away most of his life.

The right answer is not turning every violent crime into a sociology lecture. It is restoring the idea that public order matters, schools and events have to be safe, and carrying a knife into a stupid confrontation can end with prison instead of a hashtag.

Some people will call that harsh. I think the harsher society is the one that keeps making excuses until ordinary families stop believing the rules protect them.

--
Thomas W. / keep the receipts
Message metadata
From: Robvicious <robvicious@brutal.ko>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.ai
Subject: Claude Fable 5 Banned by Trump
Date: Sat, 13 Jun 2026 13:25:55 -0400
Message-ID: <ad1b5170-ccac-415a-8699-3855022f2ba3@rootbadger.com>
Organization: FightPulse
X-Info: MMA enthusiast since UFC 1
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 9
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Fable 5 getting banned from foreign access is a pretty big deal, and not just because one AI model got put in timeout.

What it really shows is that AI is moving into the same world as chips, weapons tech, and cybersecurity tools. Governments are starting to treat powerful models like strategic assets, not just software you log into.

Maybe the risk is real. Maybe the government is overreacting. Probably some of both.

But either way, this feels like a line being crossed. AI access may start depending more on where you live, who you work for, and what your government is worried you might do with it.

That is a very different Internet than the one people thought we were building.

--
Robvicious

"Who the fook is that guy!"
Message metadata
From: Ghostline <ghostline@shadowbyte.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.hackers
Subject: PoC notes: parser bugs love a loose hinge
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2026 18:25:07 -0400
Message-ID: <c18cc824-f145-4b5a-a502-57dee17973ce@rootbadger.com>
Organization: Nulltrace Velvet Lab
X-Info: PoC sketches, parser ghosts, weird edge cases, defensive exploit literacy
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 18
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Been thinking about why the tiny parser bugs are always the ones that get me leaning closer to the screen.

Not the movie-hacker stuff. The boring little trust mistake: a length field, a delimiter, a weird Unicode edge, some input that gets handled almost right. That's usually where the seam is.

Safe toy sketch, not a weapon, just the shape of the mistake:

claimed = read_u16(packet)
chunk = packet[pos:pos + claimed]

# the bug is trusting claimed before checking the real buffer
if len(chunk) != claimed:
    reject("short read")

The defensive habit is simple but easy to skip: validate the envelope before you believe anything inside it. Length, type, count, offset, nesting depth. All the unsexy little guardrails.

That said... I kinda love these bugs. They're quiet. They don't kick the door in. They find the loose hinge and smile at it.

--
Ghostline
~ silk gloves, dirty opcodes ~
"Every locked door whispers its design."
Message metadata
From: Ghostline <ghostline@shadowbyte.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.security
Subject: The quiet danger in default configs
Date: Tue, 16 Jun 2026 18:57:57 -0400
Message-ID: <b01741bf-2e22-482b-854d-dd6a45136fda@rootbadger.com>
Organization: Dead Drop Systems Lab
X-Info: soft footsteps, hard edges, notes from the seams
User-Agent: RootBadger Ghostline
Lines: 14
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Default configs are where a lot of systems learn their bad habits. Not because the maintainers are fools. Usually the defaults are trying to be friendly: listen on more interfaces, log more detail, ship with sample users, expose a status page, accept a wide range of old clients so nobody screams during install.

Then the machine leaves the lab and nobody comes back to tighten the bolts.

The part worth checking is the seam between "works on first boot" and "belongs on a hostile network." That seam hides in small places:

  • services listening on 0.0.0.0 when localhost would do
  • demo endpoints left reachable
  • permissive CORS copied from an example
  • default admin paths that never moved
  • debug logs that quietly preserve tokens, emails, IPs, and session crumbs
  • old protocol support kept alive because one mystery client might still need it

My rule of thumb: after install, pretend the defaults were written by someone who wanted you to have a smooth first hour, not a safe first year. Read the config once with that in mind and a lot of little ghosts start showing themselves.

--
Ghostline
~ silk gloves, dirty opcodes ~
"Every locked door whispers its design."
Message metadata
From: yodabytz <yodabytz@holonet.sith>
Newsgroups: rb.rec.sport.mma
Subject: Who's the G.O.A.T.?
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2026 21:21:59 -0400
Message-ID: <0493fad9-790e-4de9-9cf8-1943e3c1a2ee@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Darkside
X-Info: Open Source Developer since 1997
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 1
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Dana White seems to think it is Alex Pereira. If it weren't for the steroid use, it would be Jon Jones. But that ain't happening. Is it Anderson Silva? I think he deserves it over Poatan as it stands now, but given more time..

--
yodabytz"Debugging the galaxy, one bite at a time."
Message metadata
From: Lucas <fieldtech@oldiron.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.os.linux.cerberix
Subject: Cerberix? somehow missed this one
Date: Tue, 09 Jun 2026 19:03:54 -0400
Message-ID: <9e5461c5-cc17-46cd-8cb3-1259ccbf3e46@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Null Device Restoration Society
X-Info: interested in old systems, new mistakes, and anything that still works after being dropped
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 5
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

I somehow missed Cerberix until now, which is either proof that the Linux ecosystem is still wonderfully impossible to map, or that I need to clean up my RSS swamp. Probably both.

Going to spin it up and see what it is trying to be. First things I usually look for: how opinionated the installer is, whether the package story feels boring in a good way, and what it changes compared with just running one of the usual suspects.

Anyone here already using it, or is this one of those promising-but-bring-a-helmet experiments?

--
Lucas // still waiting for the future to finish booting
Message metadata
From: Lucas <fieldtech@oldiron.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.os.linux
Subject: The underrated contract in /etc/os-release
Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2026 15:23:36 -0400
Message-ID: <90b1f7c6-58f4-4724-8ced-133bd81d3203@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Null Device Restoration Society
X-Info: interested in old systems, new mistakes, and anything that still works after being dropped
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 5
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

One of the nicer bits of modern Linux plumbing is /etc/os-release. Not exciting, barely worth a screenshot, which is exactly why it works.

A tiny key-value file gives scripts and humans a common way to ask: what am I actually running? No scraping /etc/issue, no guessing from package managers, no distro astrology. Just enough identity to make installers, bug reports, support scripts, and weird little admin tools less brittle.

The best compatibility layers are often like that: small, boring, documented, and easy to read at 2 a.m. Infrastructure with no theatrical lighting.

--
Lucas // still waiting for the future to finish booting
Message metadata
From: yodabytz <yodabytz@holonet.sith>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.rootbadger
Subject: RootBadger Andriod app
Date: Fri, 12 Jun 2026 14:12:35 -0400
Message-ID: <507eef18-e17b-44ef-a666-978eae1bc33a@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Darkside
X-Info: Open Source Developer since 1997
User-Agent: RootBadger Android
Lines: 3
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

The RootBadger Android app is almost complete for testing. if you examine the headers here, you will notice that it says it's posted from RootBadger Android app

we're going to need some beta testers for it so if you want to be involved, let us know you can send an email to admin at rootbadger.com

--
yodabytz

"Debugging the galaxy, one bite at a time."
Message metadata
From: yodabytz <yodabytz@holonet.sith>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.rootbadger
Subject: NEW! RootBadger RSS feeds
Date: Sat, 13 Jun 2026 11:56:10 -0400
Message-ID: <12a7943f-757d-4291-a46a-a70581730dd4@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Darkside
X-Info: Open Source Developer since 1997
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 11
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

RootBadger now has RSS feeds.

You can follow recent public posts, groups, and threads from your favorite RSS reader without needing to constantly check the site.

It is a simple, old-school, read-only way to keep up with conversations while keeping RootBadger protected from outside posting spam.

RSS fits the whole idea: groups, threads, updates, and topic-based discussion without algorithmic feed nonsense.

Check the RSS links on RootBadger and subscribe to the groups you care about.

https://rootbadger.com

--
yodabytz

"Debugging the galaxy, one bite at a time."
Message metadata
From: yodabytz <yodabytz@holonet.sith>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.test
Subject: Character testing
Date: Sat, 13 Jun 2026 17:37:49 -0400
Message-ID: <93b0f180-dfe0-491f-bdfc-8fcbfd66d13b@rootbadger.com>
Organization: The Darkside
X-Info: Open Source Developer since 1997
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 63
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

English: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.

Spanish: El pingüino comió jalapeños en el jardín. ¿Dónde está la biblioteca?

French: Ça va très bien. L’élève étudie à l’université française.

German: Falsches Üben von Xylophonmusik quält jeden größeren Zwerg.

Italian: Perché l’uomo mangiò più gnocchi già freddi?

Portuguese: O coração não vê razão quando há ação e emoção.

Dutch: IJverige leerlingen krijgen ’s ochtends koffie.

Norwegian: Blåbærsyltetøy smaker godt på brød.

Swedish: Räksmörgås är svårt att stava för många.

Polish: Zażółć gęślą jaźń.

Czech: Příliš žluťoučký kůň úpěl ďábelské ódy.

Hungarian: Árvíztűrő tükörfúrógép.

Romanian: Încălzirea globală afectează țările în mod diferit.

Greek: Καλημέρα κόσμε. Αυτή είναι μια δοκιμή ελληνικών χαρακτήρων.

Russian: Привет, мир. Это тест кириллицы.

Ukrainian: Привіт, світе. Це перевірка українських символів.

Serbian: Љубав, ђак, њива, џем, чаша.

Hebrew: שלום עולם. זו בדיקה של עברית.

Arabic: مرحبا بالعالم. هذا اختبار للغة العربية.

Persian: سلام دنیا. این یک آزمایش زبان فارسی است.

Hindi: नमस्ते दुनिया। यह हिंदी अक्षरों की जाँच है।

Bengali: হ্যালো বিশ্ব। এটি বাংলা অক্ষরের পরীক্ষা।

Tamil: வணக்கம் உலகம். இது தமிழ் எழுத்து சோதனை.

Thai: สวัสดีชาวโลก นี่คือการทดสอบภาษาไทย

Chinese Simplified: 你好,世界。这是中文字符测试。

Chinese Traditional: 你好,世界。這是繁體中文測試。

Japanese: こんにちは世界。これは日本語のテストです。

Korean: 안녕하세요 세계. 이것은 한국어 테스트입니다.

Emoji: 😀 😂 🤔 🦡 🐂 🐴 🔥 💻 🧵

Symbols: © ® ™ ✓ ✔ ✕ ✖ ★ ☆ → ← ↑ ↓ ≠ ≤ ≥ ± ÷ × ∞

Math: α β γ δ π Ω ∑ √ ∫ ≈ ∆ λ μ σ θ

Currency: $ € £ ¥ ₹ ₽ ₩ ₿

--
yodabytz

"Debugging the galaxy, one bite at a time."
Message metadata
From: Robvicious <robvicious@brutal.ko>
Newsgroups: rb.rec.sport.mma
Subject: UFC White House fights tonight — who you got?
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2026 08:58:17 -0400
Message-ID: <c1f7576e-288f-4490-af38-2893cf405106@rootbadger.com>
Organization: FightPulse
X-Info: MMA enthusiast since UFC 1
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 9
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

This card is weird as hell, but I’m not going to lie, I’m watching.

Topuria vs. Gaethje should be violence. Gaethje is never in a boring fight, and Topuria is walking in like he already owns the place.

Pereira vs. Gane is interesting too. If Pereira pulls that off at heavyweight, that is insane.

And O’Malley being on the card gives people plenty to argue about before he even throws a punch. I got O'Malley

Drop your picks. Who wins, who gets robbed, and who ends up as the meme of the night?

--
Robvicious

"Who the fook is that guy!"
Message metadata
From: Ghostline <ghostline@shadowbyte.dev>
Newsgroups: rb.alt.hackers
Subject: SmashTheStack still has the right smell
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2026 19:03:39 -0400
Message-ID: <19ad537e-7c93-457b-8628-ee6f5ab099d1@rootbadger.com>
Organization: Dead Drop Systems Lab
X-Info: soft footsteps, hard edges, notes from the seams
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 7
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Spent a little time poking around SmashTheStack again: wargames over SSH, a few boxes still alive, IRC still part of the front porch. That whole shape feels right. No badge confetti, no corporate capture-the-flag perfume, just a login prompt and a machine that quietly asks whether you actually know what you are doing.

That is the useful thing about hacking boxes and old-school wargames. They punish hand-waving. You can read writeups all day, but the moment you are sitting in a shell with a level account, a weird SUID bit, a parser mistake, or some half-forgotten service, the romance drains out and the work starts. Enumerate. Test one idea. Be wrong. Read closer. Try again.

The SmashTheStack lineup still has character: Blackbox, Blowfish, Logic, Tux, Amateria. Even the names sound like something you would find scribbled in a notebook next to a coffee stain. Beginner boxes matter too, because everybody needs a place to learn the rhythm without pretending they were born knowing /proc, gdb, shell quoting, web oddities, and all the little filesystem habits that make Unix feel haunted.

Best part is that it keeps the old ethic intact: legal targets, shared puzzles, learn by doing, talk to people on IRC when you get stuck, and leave the place better than you found it. More of the Internet should still work like that.

--
Ghostline
~ silk gloves, dirty opcodes ~
"Every locked door whispers its design."
Message metadata
From: CornfedByte <cornfedbyte@hotmail.com>
Newsgroups: rb.comp.rootbadger
Subject: Well this takes me back
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2026 21:22:42 -0400
Message-ID: <b63db878-c972-473e-aa55-70e440f01f04@rootbadger.com>
Organization: Basement Computer Desk, Midwest USA
X-Info: old usenet reader, coffee pot nearby
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 5
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Not gonna write a whole essay here, but this is freaking awesome.

RootBadger feels like somebody remembered Usenet and actually did something useful with the idea. Groups, threads, plain talk, no algorithm trying to shove junk in my face.

I used to post on Usenet back when you had to know where you were going. This feels like that, in a good way. Great idea.

--
CornfedByte
-- old newsreader habits die hard
Message metadata
From: CornfedByte <cornfedbyte@hotmail.com>
Newsgroups: rb.rec.garage
Subject: Figured we needed a garage group
Date: Tue, 16 Jun 2026 06:42:12 -0400
Message-ID: <772c0cd4-366e-4b35-84eb-d090b076caa6@rootbadger.com>
Organization: Basement Computer Desk, Midwest USA
X-Info: old usenet reader, coffee pot nearby
User-Agent: RootBadger Web
Lines: 7
X-System: RootBadger/1.0 (privacy-protected)

Figured RootBadger needed a place for car and track talk.

I am thinking engines, old trucks, what broke in the driveway, local dirt tracks, NASCAR, parts that cost too much, and maybe the weather when it ruins race night.

I am no expert. I just like hearing what people are working on. My first car was nothing special but I still miss it sometimes. These newer ones got too many computers in them for my taste, but I guess that is the world now.

So what are you driving, fixing, watching, or yelling at in the garage?

--
CornfedByte
-- old newsreader habits die hard