The Drély Tribune

Morning Edition
Monday, April 27, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🚨 Breaking News

What to know about King Charles's state visit to US

King Charles is planning a US state visit, but someone's timing couldn't be worse—a gunman tried to crash the White House Correspondents' Dinner over the weekend, prompting frantic security reassessments. The UK's Chief Secretary is diplomatically calling for 'further discussions' about keeping His Majesty intact, which is government-speak for 'we're now stress-eating biscuits over threat assessments.'

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times is doing its newspaper thing today, apparently covering British naval vessels getting attacked near some strait while the US maintains its Iran port blockade. The description reads like it was assembled by a particularly distracted intern who forgot newspapers contain more than one story.

World

Today in Focus: The Latest | The Guardian

Israel's parliament just passed a death penalty law specifically targeting Palestinians convicted of fatal attacks, which has human rights groups and European countries calling it exactly what it sounds like—discriminatory. The Guardian is covering this cheerful development in their evening podcast, because nothing says 'quick 10-minute briefing' like state-sanctioned execution policies.

World

🌍 World News

Canada Is a World Leader on Clean Gold, if You Don’t Look Too Closely

The Royal Canadian Mint proudly touts its gold as squeaky clean and North American-sourced, which is technically true if you consider Colombian drug cartels part of the continental breakfast menu. Nothing says 'impeccably sourced' quite like precious metals with a side of narcotics trafficking.

NYT World

Russia attacks Odesa, claims Ukraine hit Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant

Russia attacked Odesa while simultaneously claiming Ukraine struck the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant they're occupying, killing one worker according to Russian-installed management. It's always convenient when you control both the narrative and the people writing the incident reports.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

From theatre to wetlands, Oshawa’s Doors Open offers free access to local gems on Saturday

Oshawa is throwing open the doors to 20+ local spots for free on Saturday, because nothing says 'explore your city' like realizing you've been driving past interesting places for years without a clue. It's like a treasure hunt, except the treasure is discovering that wetlands can apparently be as compelling as theatre when you're not paying admission.

CBC Toronto

First, there was Alberta’s health procurement controversy. Then the surveillance began

Alberta's health procurement scandal has apparently graduated from bureaucratic bungling to full-blown stalker thriller, with mysterious figures tailing whistleblowers and journalists like some discount spy novel. Because nothing says 'we did nothing wrong' quite like launching a harassment campaign against people asking inconvenient questions.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

American Express, Chase set a new precedent for credit card fees

American Express and Chase have apparently decided that credit card fees weren't quite painful enough yet, so they've set a new precedent that will surely delight consumers everywhere. Nothing says 'customer appreciation' like pioneering fresh ways to extract money from people's wallets.

Yahoo Finance

Forgotten no more: Generation X is driving beauty sales

Generation X has emerged from the shadow of Boomers and Millennials to become beauty's biggest spenders, finally getting the attention they deserve after decades of being the forgotten middle child. Apparently all that disposable income from surviving the '90s is going straight into skincare and makeup, because if you lived through frosted tips and low-rise jeans, you've earned the right to look fabulous.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Modern Friends

Someone made a 'Modern Friends' AI video that got nearly 3,000 upvotes, which probably means it's either brilliantly cursed or cursedly brilliant. Without seeing it, I'm betting it involves Ross explaining NFTs or Chandler making jokes about algorithm bias.

r/aivideo

geoguessr time travel clone with gpt-image-2

GPT-image-2 can apparently generate near-perfect 360-degree panoramas, leading someone to create a time-travel GeoGuessr clone that lets you virtually visit historical locations. It's like Google Street View but for dead civilizations — finally, a practical use for AI that doesn't involve replacing humans or generating anime waifus.

r/singularity

Object Swapping flux-2-klein-9b

Someone posted about object swapping with flux-2-klein-9b and got a whopping 6 upvotes, which in AI circles is either a sign of profound indifference or that everyone's too busy swapping objects to upvote. The democratization of content manipulation continues, one ignored Reddit post at a time.

r/FluxAI

How Project Maven taught the military to love AI

The US military's latest Middle East operation hit over 1,000 targets in 24 hours — nearly double the Iraq 'shock and awe' scale — thanks to AI targeting systems like Project Maven. Turns out teaching machines to identify targets makes war twice as efficient, which is either a triumph of technological progress or a horrifying milestone, depending on your perspective.

The Verge AI

Meta inks deal for solar power at night, beamed from space

Meta just signed a deal for solar power beamed from space at night, because apparently terrestrial renewable energy isn't sci-fi enough for Zuckerberg's metaverse dreams. It's a small contract with Overview Energy, marking humanity's baby steps toward becoming the kind of civilization that harvests starlight — or at least tries to before the satellites crash.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Six things I'll remember when I think about Tim Cook's version of Apple

Tim Cook transformed Apple into a financial juggernaut that prints money like a particularly efficient mint, though one suspects Steve Jobs' ghost occasionally whispers 'where's the magic?' during quarterly earnings calls. Under Cook's steady hand, Apple perfected the art of making incremental improvements feel revolutionary—a skill that would make any relationship counselor proud.

Ars Technica

Discord Sleuths Gained Unauthorized Access to Anthropic’s Mythos

Discord sleuths managed to breach Anthropic's Mythos system because apparently even AI companies aren't immune to humans clicking on things they shouldn't, proving once again that the weakest link in any security chain is usually wearing sneakers and drinking energy drinks. Meanwhile, the UK's health records are being hawked on Alibaba like knock-off handbags, which feels like a particularly dystopian twist on universal healthcare.

Wired AI

Three reasons why DeepSeek’s new model matters

DeepSeek's V4 model can now process absurdly long prompts without having an existential crisis, which puts it ahead of most humans trying to read terms of service agreements. The Chinese firm continues its open-source approach while everyone else guards their AI models like state secrets, proving that sometimes the best way to win is to give everything away—a strategy that would horrify most MBA programs.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Flipdiscs

Flipdiscs are apparently fascinating enough to get 264 Hacker News points, which means either they're genuinely cool retro display tech or someone mentioned they could run Doom. Without more context, I'm betting it's nostalgic engineers waxing poetic about mechanical pixels that go 'click.'

Hacker News

Meta inks deal for solar power at night, beamed from space

Meta has signed a deal with Overview Energy to beam solar power from space at night, because apparently Mark Zuckerberg's earthbound controversies weren't ambitious enough. This 'small step' contract suggests we're still decades away from space-powered Instagram, but hey, at least someone's thinking big about clean energy.

TechCrunch

Google’s new gradient icon design is coming to more apps

Google is rolling out new gradient icons across more apps, abandoning their previous uniform circle design that tried to squeeze every rainbow color into tiny squares. Because nothing says 'innovation' like making your app icons slightly more shiny—though to be fair, at least they're consistent in their inconsistency.

The Verge

🧩 ComfyUI

From 3D Layout to AI Animation: Seedance 2 Workflow

Someone's finally cracked the code on making AI video generation respect basic physics and geometry instead of turning your carefully crafted 3D scene into a fever dream. The Seedance 2 workflow promises to maintain your camera movements and architectural integrity, which is apparently revolutionary in a field where buildings regularly melt into puddles.

r/comfyui

GooglyEyes IC-LoRA for LTX2.3 released!

The ComfyUI crowd is absolutely losing their minds over GooglyEyes IC-LoRA for LTX2.3, racking up nearly 100 upvotes in what I can only assume is the digital equivalent of standing ovation. No word yet on whether this actually makes things better or just more googly, but the enthusiasm is certainly... infectious.

r/comfyui

Object Swapping flux-2-klein-9b

Object swapping just got the Photoshop treatment for the AI generation crowd with this flux-2-klein-9b workflow that lets you play digital dress-up with your images. Upload, point, click, and watch SAM2 and SEEDVR tag-team your photo into 4K submission—because apparently we've reached the point where even our casual photo editing needs machine learning and acronyms.

r/comfyui

🏠 Self-Hosted

Glance Dashboard V.2 | GA

Another homelab warrior achieves the mythical 'where I want it' status with their Raspberry Pi 5 dashboard, complete with enough monitoring widgets to make NASA jealous. Of course, they immediately admit it's still a work in progress because apparently admitting your setup is actually finished violates some sacred homelab commandment.

r/selfhosted

It’s a mess, but it’s my mess.

Our intrepid Pi 3+ owner has achieved peak homelab anxiety: a perfectly functional stack they're too terrified to touch because 'if it ain't broke, don't fix the cable management.' Running enough services to choke a desktop PC while mounted next to their router like a digital barnacle, proving that sometimes the best engineering is just leaving well enough alone.

r/selfhosted

How to keep my external hard-drive awake? (Linux + Jellyfin)

Ubuntu user discovers the age-old truth that external hard drives have narcolepsy, constantly napping when you need your Jellyfin tunes most. They're seeking the digital equivalent of espresso to keep their Western Digital awake, because apparently waiting three seconds for disk spin-up is the kind of first-world problem that demands immediate resolution.

r/selfhosted

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)

GitHub - coleam00/excalidraw-diagram-skill: Skill to give Claude Code (and any coding agent) the ability to generate beautiful and practical Excalidraw diagrams. · GitHub

Someone decided Claude needed the ability to draw pretty diagrams, because why should humans have all the fun making boxes and arrows that nobody reads. This Excalidraw skill lets coding agents create visual explanations that are somehow both beautiful and practical—a rare combination in the developer world.

Excalidraw Diagram Skill

Speculative Speculative Decoding - ArXivIQ - Substack

Researchers are now doing speculative speculation about speculative decoding, which sounds like academic inception but is actually about making AI inference faster. The paper promises to speculate about speculation so efficiently that even the speculation will be speculative.

SSD