The Drély Tribune

Morning Edition
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times offers cryptic musings about something called Pickaxe Mountain, which apparently serves as Exhibit A in the 'military force won't stop Iran's nuclear ambitions' argument. Because nothing says comprehensive journalism quite like building foreign policy analysis around a mountain most people have never heard of.

World

'Good to Be Home': Savannah Guthrie Returns to 'Today'

Savannah Guthrie returned to the Today show after what one assumes was a brief absence, immediately proving her dedication by rattling off the usual litany of global chaos before pivoting to college basketball. Nothing says 'good to be home' quite like seamlessly transitioning from international warfare to March Madness.

World

Today in Focus: The Latest | The Guardian

Israel's parliament passed a death penalty law specifically targeting Palestinians convicted of fatal attacks, prompting European hand-wringing and human rights groups to deploy their strongest weapon: strongly worded criticism. The Guardian helpfully packages this into a tidy 10-minute podcast for those who prefer their existential geopolitical crises bite-sized.

World

🌍 World News

Trump buys time for Iran deal after frantic day of diplomacy

Trump apparently discovered that starting wars requires actual follow-through, so he's hit the snooze button on Iran escalation for the second time this month — because nothing says 'Art of the Deal' like repeatedly bluffing yourself into corners.

BBC World

Iran’s gunboat fires on container ship off Oman coast

The IRGC threw a nautical tantrum and fired on a container ship, claiming it was payback for the US allegedly grabbing their commercial vessel — because apparently international shipping lanes have become the new playground for tit-for-tat boat drama.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

Major bank identifies surprising trend for American crypto investors

A major bank has apparently discovered that American crypto investors do something unexpected, though they're keeping us in suspense about what that might be. Either their data scientists are terrible at writing headlines, or they've found out that people actually read the terms and conditions before YOLOing their life savings into DogeCoin derivatives.

Yahoo Finance

Adobe is betting a quarter of its value against the so-called SaaSpocalypse

Adobe is putting $60 billion where their mouth is, betting that AI won't murder their cash cow but will instead play nice and help Photoshop users create even more impossibly smooth influencer selfies. It's a bold strategy Cotton, let's see if teaching robots to be creative works out better for them than it did for humanity in general.

MarketWatch

United Airlines slashes 2026 forecast as fuel costs surge

United Airlines decided to rain on everyone's 2026 vacation parade by slashing their forecast, blaming fuel costs that are apparently more volatile than a Twitter CEO's mood swings. The silver lining is they beat Q1 expectations, proving that corporate America's favorite hobby remains setting the bar so low that stepping over it counts as an achievement.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

When you forget to include "Masterpiece" in your prompt.

The AI art community discovers that forgetting the magic word 'Masterpiece' in your prompt is apparently like ordering a burger without the bun — technically functional, but disappointingly ordinary. Sometimes the most important ingredients are the ones you take for granted.

r/StableDiffusion

Harry Potter Drip EP4 (Official) - Unhindered Studios

Harry Potter gets the drip treatment in Episode 4, because apparently the wizarding world needed more streetwear credibility than Quidditch robes could provide. Nothing says 'You're a wizard, Harry' quite like designer sneakers and a fitted cap.

r/aivideo

Tested 4 AI hairstyle tools - which one actually looks realistic?

Someone tested four AI hairstyle tools to avoid the eternal terror of asking for 'just a trim' and getting a buzz cut. TheRightHairstyles apparently won by focusing on actual style advice rather than turning you into a Instagram filter fever dream.

r/FluxAI

Anthropic’s most dangerous AI model just fell into the wrong hands

Anthropic's supposedly dangerous Mythos AI has been accessed by unauthorized users, because apparently even AI companies can't secure their own digital Pandora's boxes. Nothing builds confidence in AI safety quite like reading 'oops, the dangerous thing got loose' in your morning news.

The Verge AI

Meta will record employees’ keystrokes and use it to train its AI models

Meta has decided that watching employees click and type is prime AI training material, transforming your Monday morning coffee-fueled procrastination into valuable machine learning data. Your frustrated sighs while navigating spreadsheets are now contributing to the singularity.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Clarifying HEVC licensing fees, royalties, and why vendors kill HEVC support

HEVC licensing remains a beautiful mess of competing patent pools and royalty schemes, which explains why your favorite video app keeps mysteriously dropping support just when you need it most. Vendors would rather deal with slightly worse compression than navigate a legal minefield where every frame could cost them money.

Ars Technica

The Pope’s Warnings About AI Were AI-Generated, a Detection Tool Claims

The Vatican's AI warnings were apparently generated by AI itself, creating a delicious recursive loop of artificial intelligence cautioning against artificial intelligence. Pangram Labs' detection tool caught this digital ouroboros in the act, proving that even divine tech guidance isn't immune to the slop epidemic.

Wired AI

Roundtables: Unveiling The 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now

MIT's AI conference produced another breathless list of '10 Things That Matter' in artificial intelligence, because apparently we've run out of ways to package the same hype cycle into digestible chunks. Subscribers paid extra to learn what everyone else will figure out is obvious in six months anyway.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Windows 9x Subsystem for Linux

Some genius has apparently created a Windows 9x subsystem for Linux, because nothing says 'productivity boost' like voluntarily subjecting yourself to blue screens of death in 2024. The 16 upvotes on Hacker News suggest there are at least 16 people who miss the days when computers crashed with more character.

Hacker News

Anker made its own chip to bring AI to all its products

Anker has decided that what the world really needs is AI-powered phone chargers and earbuds, so they've built their own chip to make it happen. Their 'Thus' processor promises to bring neural networks to your cable collection, because apparently even your USB-C adapter needs to be smarter than you now.

The Verge

🧩 ComfyUI

Thank you!

A heartwarming tale of Reddit-powered enlightenment: someone spent weeks wrestling with Comfy and Flux, only to discover that collective internet wisdom was the key all along. They've now achieved the holy grail of AI art—incredible detail through Flux.2 and SeedVR2 upscaling, proving that sometimes the real treasure was the forum posts we read along the way.

r/comfyui

Make any video into VR with Muffins flat 2 VR!

Behold 'Muffins flat 2 VR'—because apparently we needed a carb-themed solution to transform regular videos into VR experiences. This workflow uses LTX 2.3 to stretch your footage into panoramic glory, then applies some fisheye magic and depth wizardry to create VR180/360 content, presumably making your cat videos infinitely more immersive.

r/comfyui

Sage Attention 3 on Windows

The eternal Windows struggle continues as another brave soul attempts to get Sage Attention 3 running on Comfy Portable, only to be thwarted by compilation failures. They're currently stuck with the ancient relics of Triton and Sage 2.2, desperately seeking the secret incantation to unlock the next version—a tale as old as software dependencies themselves.

r/comfyui

🏠 Self-Hosted

Self-hosted personal finance automation: n8n + Actual Budget + SimpleFIN + Claude on my homelab.

Someone has achieved the self-hosting holy grail: a fully automated personal finance setup that syncs banks, categorizes transactions with AI, and probably knows your spending habits better than you do. At roughly a penny per 100 transactions, Claude Haiku is apparently cheaper than financial shame—though your mileage may vary on the existential cost of having a robot judge your Starbucks addiction.

r/selfhosted

Twenty v2.0: Self-hosted CRM

Twenty CRM drops v2.0 with the ambitious goal of recreating Salesforce's 20-year-old framework idea, but this time with the modern twist of being open-source and self-hosted. They're betting that what enterprise software really needed was another layer of abstraction—because apparently regular web frameworks weren't quite enterprise-y enough for tracking your customers' increasingly creative reasons for not paying invoices.

r/selfhosted

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)

Speculative Speculative Decoding - ArXivIQ - Substack

Researchers have invented 'Speculative Speculative Decoding'—yes, they named it twice because apparently regular speculation wasn't meta enough. It's a technique to make AI inference faster by guessing what the model might guess, which sounds like inception but for computational efficiency nerds.

SSD