The Drély Tribune

Morning Edition
Thursday, April 30, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🚨 Breaking News

Oil price briefly hits $120 after reports of 'extended' Iran blockade

Oil prices briefly kissed $120 as markets threw a tantrum over reports of an 'extended' Iran blockade, because nothing says 'stable energy policy' like geopolitical brinksmanship in the world's favorite shipping chokepoint. Crude oil continues its emotional roller coaster ride, proving once again that global energy markets have the emotional stability of a caffeinated teenager.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

Two vessels reportedly came under attack near the strait while the U.S. maintains its blockade on Iranian ports, turning one of the world's busiest shipping lanes into an increasingly expensive game of maritime chicken. The British naval agency's dry report fails to capture the delicious irony of trying to keep global trade flowing while simultaneously throttling it.

World

Today, In Short - The New York Times

The Supreme Court justices will spend today pondering Trump's plan to yank humanitarian protections from hundreds of thousands of Haitian and Syrian migrants, because apparently the court's docket wasn't depressing enough already. Nothing quite says 'judicial review' like deciding the fate of people fleeing countries that make a Kafka novel look optimistic.

World

🌍 World News

Oil price hits highest since 2022 after report Trump to be briefed on new Iran options

Oil prices are doing their best 2022 cosplay after reports surfaced that Trump might get a military briefing on Iran strike options—because apparently 'short and powerful' is the new diplomatic philosophy. Nothing says market stability quite like the prospect of Middle Eastern fireworks courtesy of US Central Command's latest PowerPoint presentation.

BBC World

Iranians Live With Pain and Powerlessness, Beneath a Smooth Veneer

Iranians are mastering the art of existential multitasking, maintaining everyday normalcy while quietly wrestling with grief, economic chaos, and the slow death of hope. It's like trying to fold laundry during an earthquake—technically possible, but everything feels fundamentally unstable beneath the surface calm.

NYT World

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Psychiatry chairs at medical schools oppose expanding MAID for mental illness

Psychiatry department heads are pumping the brakes on expanding medical assistance in dying for mental illness cases, creating an awkward standoff as federal committees explore making it available by March. Nothing quite like having the experts who treat the condition oppose making it grounds for ending treatment permanently.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

141-year-old candy store chain closes all retail locations

A 141-year-old candy store chain has finally succumbed to the modern world's preference for diabetes via apps rather than charming storefronts. After surviving two world wars and the Great Depression, it turns out Amazon was the final boss they couldn't defeat.

Yahoo Finance

🎨 AI for Content Creators

BACKGROUND CLEANLINESS COMPARISON (10 models)

Someone finally did the lord's work and tested 10 T2I models to see which ones can actually produce a clean white background without looking like they sneezed pixels everywhere. Spoiler alert: most AI models apparently think 'perfectly white background' means 'perfectly white background with a generous sprinkle of digital dandruff.'

r/StableDiffusion

My medieval sitcom is really coming together

A Redditor's medieval sitcom project is winning hearts and upvotes, proving that humanity's greatest achievement might be teaching machines to recreate the comedic timing of ye olde times. Finally, AI that understands the inherent hilarity of feudalism and poor hygiene.

r/aivideo

Flux-ai.io History Disappeared

A user renewed their Flux-ai.io membership only to discover their year's worth of creative work vanished into the digital void, like a cruel magic trick where the rabbit never comes back. Nothing says 'customer retention' quite like making your paying users' entire portfolio disappear.

r/FluxAI

Elon Musk’s worst enemy in court is Elon Musk

Elon Musk's courtroom performance was so cringe-inducing that it made a journalist feel genuine sympathy for Sam Altman, which should probably qualify as a minor miracle. Apparently Musk's greatest legal adversary isn't opposing counsel—it's his own inability to stop talking.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

Drone pilot makes US rescind no-fly zones around unmarked, moving ICE vehicles

A drone pilot's civil liberties challenge just forced the FAA to admit that maybe, just maybe, creating secret no-fly zones around unmarked government vehicles wasn't the most transparent approach to law enforcement. Turns out even immigration cops can't just declare airspace off-limits without telling anyone where or why.

Ars Technica

Reid Hoffman Thinks Doctors Should Ask AI for a Second Opinion

LinkedIn's Reid Hoffman has pivoted from connecting your annoying college roommate to your feed to insisting doctors consult ChatGPT before prescribing aspirin. His new AI drug discovery venture comes with the bold claim that not asking a chatbot for medical advice is basically malpractice—because nothing says 'sound medical judgment' like outsourcing diagnosis to the same technology that thinks glue belongs on pizza.

Wired AI

The Download: storing nuclear waste and orchestrating agents

MIT's technology newsletter tackles the exciting twin challenges of where to bury radioactive waste for the next 10,000 years and how to make AI agents play nice with each other. Because apparently we've mastered creating both digital chaos and atomic leftovers, but the cleanup phase still needs some work.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Where the goblins came from

Hacker News discovers the ancient origins of goblins with the kind of enthusiasm usually reserved for new JavaScript frameworks—609 upvotes and probably twice as many arguments about etymology in the comments.

Hacker News

🧩 ComfyUI

Blender Layout → AI Render | 1:1 Camera Tracking

Someone discovered that AI video generators work much better when you actually plan your shots like a real filmmaker instead of just typing 'cool dragon scene' and praying. Who could have predicted that decades of cinematography knowledge would transfer to teaching robots how to move cameras?

r/comfyui

Prompt wrong encoded

Developer discovers their AI model has developed selective hearing — perfectly understands 'big anime eyes' but goes mysteriously deaf when asked for basic camera angles. Either the prompt encoder needs debugging or their LoRA has commitment issues with actually following directions.

r/comfyui

🏠 Self-Hosted

I came to realize that selfhosted forums are an essential part towards digital sovereignty

The HortusFox dev has discovered what the rest of us learned around 2010: that giving away your community discussions to Discord is like letting a tech bro hold your diary hostage. Apparently watching Dan Brown flee to self-hosted Zulip was the digital equivalent of watching someone escape from Alcatraz and thinking 'hey, maybe I should try that too.'

r/selfhosted

Hound - A Media Server Alternative to Plex/Jellyfin + Stremio

Meet Hound, the media server that's basically Jellyfin's rebellious cousin who learned to torrent – it streams P2P content without downloading while still letting you hoard your own files like a digital dragon. It's evolved from a simple movie tracker into what sounds like the Swiss Army knife of 'I want to watch things but also stick it to streaming services.'

r/selfhosted

Copy Fail - CVE-2026-31431 - patch your systems

Copy Fail (CVE-2026-31431) is a local privilege escalation vulnerability that's been lurking in Linux kernels since 2017, requiring nothing more than an unprivileged account to ruin your day. The fact that it's called 'Copy Fail' suggests either the researchers have a sense of humor or they've given up on creative naming after discovering yet another way computers can betray us.

r/selfhosted

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)

Speculative Speculative Decoding - ArXivIQ - Substack

Researchers invented 'Speculative Speculative Decoding' — yes, they said speculative twice, presumably because regular speculation wasn't meta enough. It's about making AI inference faster by guessing what the model will guess, which sounds like gambling with extra steps.

SSD