The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Thursday, April 23, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

Two ships got roughed up near a strait while the U.S. continues its maritime timeout for Iran—because apparently someone forgot to tell the attackers that economic pressure works better when you don't literally shoot the messenger.

World

Today, In Short - The New York Times

The NYT serves up its usual eclectic buffet: British people being mean (shocking), the refined art of rice wine, and grown men's futures decided by other grown men in suits—truly the full spectrum of human civilization.

World

Today in Focus: The Latest | The Guardian

Israel's parliament just passed a death penalty law that only applies to Palestinians, prompting the international community to clutch their pearls and point out the obvious—though one wonders if strongly-worded criticism will prove as effective as usual.

World

🌍 World News

Trump tells BBC that King's visit could 'absolutely' help repair relations with UK

Trump thinks King Charles popping by for tea could magically fix whatever's left of the 'special relationship' — because nothing says diplomacy like a monarch who talks to plants meeting a man who talks to himself on social media. The BBC somehow managed to get him on the phone, probably by promising not to fact-check in real time.

BBC World

The Generals Who Are Now Running Iran

Iran's Supreme Leader has apparently shuffled off this mortal coil, leaving the Revolutionary Guards to run the show through what they're calling 'collective leadership' — which is just a fancy way of saying the generals are now openly in charge instead of pretending to take orders from clerics. Democracy was never really on the table, but now they're not even bothering with the theological window dressing.

NYT World

Funeral held for journalist killed in targeted Israeli strike

Another journalist, Amal Khalil, was killed in what Israel calls a 'targeted strike' in southern Lebanon — because apparently nothing says 'precision military operation' like making sure the people documenting your actions can't file their stories. Her colleagues and family gathered to mourn someone whose only crime was trying to tell the truth in a region where that's become a capital offense.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Trudeau says U.S. auto tariffs threaten to push Canada closer to China

Trudeau warns that U.S. auto tariffs could push Canada toward China, citing how American economic bullying nearly sent Bombardier into Beijing's embrace a decade ago. Nothing says 'strategic ally' quite like threatening your neighbor's economy until they start shopping for new friends.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Cathie Wood buys $900,000 of surging megacap stock

Cathie Wood drops $900k on a 'surging megacap stock' — because apparently when you're known for bold bets, you can't just quietly buy index funds like the rest of us. The ARK captain continues her quest to prove that conviction investing beats diversification, one headline-grabbing purchase at a time.

Yahoo Finance

Nike cuts 1,400 roles in second round of layoffs this year

Nike serves up its second helping of layoffs this year, axing 1,400 employees mostly from tech after trimming 775 jobs in January. Nothing says 'just do it' quite like doing it twice in twelve months — though I suppose 'streamlining operations' doesn't fit as neatly on a swoosh.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

1K gens, 15K images, feature length, Escape From Berlin Final Trailer

Someone made a feature-length film called 'Escape From Berlin' using 1,000 generations and 15,000 images, proving that with enough computational brute force, you too can achieve what film school dropouts have been doing with actual cameras for decades. Reddit is predictably impressed.

r/aivideo

Introducing GPT-5.5

GPT-5.5 has apparently been introduced, though the lack of actual details suggests this is either the most underwhelming AI breakthrough ever or someone's creative writing exercise getting more upvotes than it deserves. The singularity subreddit remains as discerning as ever.

r/singularity

A quick and likely clueless question about seeds

A confused soul discovers their character LoRA produced one perfect image and wonders if seeds are magic reproducibility tokens—spoiler alert, they're not, and chasing that perfect accident is how you develop a gambling addiction but with computational resources instead of slot machines.

r/FluxAI

Meta is laying off 10 percent of its staff

Meta is laying off 8,000 employees (10% of staff) and closing 6,000 open positions, because apparently the metaverse doesn't pay for itself and someone needs to fund Zuckerberg's continued quest to make virtual reality happen. The memo comes from the 'chief people officer,' a title that ages like milk during layoff announcements.

The Verge AI

Bret Taylor’s Sierra buys YC-backed AI startup Fragment

Bret Taylor's Sierra acquires YC-backed French startup Fragment, adding another trophy to the collection of AI customer service companies that promise to revolutionize human interaction by eliminating humans from the equation entirely. Because nothing says 'improved customer experience' like more acquisition press releases.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Investors lost billions on Trump’s memecoin. Another gala won’t fix that.

Trump's memecoin venture managed to turn 'diamond hands' into 'empty pockets' for investors who apparently thought presidential tokens were a sound investment strategy. Now Democrats are eyeing potential pay-to-play investigations, because nothing says 'draining the swamp' quite like hosting fundraising galas for your own cryptocurrency.

Ars Technica

The Download: introducing the Nature issue

MIT's latest newsletter tackles the 'Nature issue' with the cheerful reminder that pristine wilderness is basically extinct thanks to microplastics and light pollution. Turns out when humans say they want to 'get back to nature,' they're really just looking for the least contaminated outdoor experience available.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

GPT-5.5

GPT-5.5 is generating serious buzz on Hacker News with 862 upvotes, though whether that's excitement or existential dread about our AI overlords remains charmingly ambiguous. Nothing says 'we're definitely not in a tech bubble' quite like version number inflation that would make a car manufacturer blush.

Hacker News

These are the countries moving to ban social media for children

Australia blazed the trail in late 2025 by banning social media for kids, citing the usual suspects of cyberbullying and predators while other countries scramble to follow suit. It's almost quaint watching governments try to put the digital genie back in the bottle after letting it ravage an entire generation's attention spans first.

TechCrunch

Brendan Carr’s war on wokeness targets inclusive children’s television

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr is waging holy war against inclusive children's TV, apparently convinced that Bluey discussing feelings might somehow corrupt America's youth. The agency is now crowdsourcing moral panic through public comments, because nothing says 'small government' quite like federal bureaucrats micromanaging cartoon content.

The Verge

🧩 ComfyUI

1 Click Dataset Maker Workflow (Klein 9b)

Someone's created a one-click dataset maker for Klein 9b that promises exact preservation without LoRA training. Because apparently clicking multiple times was the real bottleneck holding back AI progress, not the existential dread of automating human creativity.

r/comfyui

Runpod constant silent price hikes? What's going on?

Runpod has been quietly jacking up GPU rental prices by 43% over four months, turning what used to be affordable AI tinkering into a premium hobby. Nothing says 'democratizing AI' quite like pricing out everyone except venture-funded startups and trust fund kids.

r/comfyui

LTX-2.3 Updated Workflow — T2V, I2V and Reference Audio in ComfyUI GGUF

LTX-2.3 workflow update claims it's ready to dethrone industry standard Wan, running surprisingly well on humble 3060 hardware. Bold words from someone whose description got cut off mid-sentence, though the confidence is either inspiring or concerning depending on your cynicism levels.

r/comfyui

🏠 Self-Hosted

New Project Megathread - Week of 23 Apr 2026

Reddit's r/programming introduces a containment thread for new projects, presumably because AI is now generating code faster than humans can scroll past it. Nothing says 'innovation' quite like corralling creativity into a weekly megathread to prevent timeline flooding.

r/selfhosted

Bitwarden CLI has been compromised. Check your stuff.

Bitwarden's CLI tool got pwned, which is ironic considering it's literally designed to keep your passwords safe from exactly this scenario. Time for that awkward conversation where you explain to your passwords that their bodyguard has been compromised.

r/selfhosted

Wife/Family Approved Paperless Alternative

A developer seeks a 'family-friendly' alternative to Paperless because apparently asking your spouse to navigate a document management system is harder than explaining why you need another homelab server. The real challenge isn't finding software—it's convincing anyone else that digitizing grocery receipts is a worthwhile endeavor.

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 in Excalidraw, because nothing says 'artificial intelligence' quite like making flowcharts. Now your coding agent can procrastinate just like human developers — by spending three hours perfecting a diagram instead of writing actual code.

Excalidraw Diagram Skill

Speculative Speculative Decoding - ArXivIQ - Substack

Researchers are getting meta with 'Speculative Speculative Decoding' — basically making AI models guess what they're going to guess before they guess it. It's like inception, but for language models, and probably just as confusing to explain at dinner parties.

SSD

GitHub - matt1398/claude-devtools: The missing DevTools for Claude Code — inspect session logs, tool calls, token usage, subagents, and context window in a visual UI. Free, open source.

Finally, someone built proper DevTools for Claude Code so you can watch your AI assistant think in real-time — complete with token usage, tool calls, and all the existential debugging you never knew you needed. It's free and open source, which means it's either genuinely useful or someone's elaborate procrastination project.

claude-devtools