The Drély Tribune

Morning Edition
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times mentions British naval vessels under attack near the strait while a US blockade continues, though their description reads like it was written by a caffeinated intern having an HTML fever dream. Sometimes the most newsworthy thing about today's paper is how incomprehensible the summary managed to be.

World

US reviews latest Iranian proposal to end war stalemate | Reuters

Trump huddled with his security team Monday to review Iran's latest peace proposal, because nothing says 'careful diplomatic consideration' like a president known for making foreign policy decisions via Twitter. The war remains stalemated while regional energy supplies dwindle — shocking absolutely no one who's been paying attention.

Breaking

🌍 World News

Suspect charged with attempted assassination of Trump at Washington dinner

A 31-year-old Californian apparently decided a Washington dinner was the perfect venue for some extreme political commentary, targeting Trump and other high-level officials in what investigators are calling an assassination attempt. Because nothing says 'making a statement' quite like weaponizing a social gathering where the strongest thing on the menu is usually the coffee.

BBC World

Internet Restrictions Spur Russians to Openly Question Putin’s Moves

Putin's internet crackdown has backfired spectacularly, with even beauty influencers and his own token opposition now openly critiquing his digital authoritarianism. Turns out when you make it harder for people to scroll through cat videos, they start paying attention to actual politics—who could have predicted that?

NYT World

Iraq appoints new prime minister-designate

Iraq has appointed yet another prime minister-designate, continuing the nation's time-honored tradition of political musical chairs. The lack of details in this announcement suggests either supreme confidence in the appointment or supreme exhaustion with the whole process.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Canada is getting a sovereign wealth fund. What are they and how might this one work?

Canada's launching a sovereign wealth fund called the 'Canada Strong Fund' — because apparently nothing says financial confidence quite like naming your investment vehicle after a Tim Hortons commercial. Unlike other countries that start these funds with actual surplus cash, Canada's version will need some creative accounting to figure out where the seed money comes from.

CBC Canada

How some Toronto homeowners are protecting themselves amid rise of home invasions

Toronto homeowners are now installing security film on their windows to thwart home invaders, which is basically the residential equivalent of putting a band-aid on a broken leg. Nothing says 'thriving metropolis' quite like having to fortify your house like it's medieval times, but with better glass technology.

CBC Toronto

Carney promises ‘good news’ in spring economic update

Mark Carney is teasing 'good news' in the spring economic update, with analysts expecting a smaller deficit than previously projected — which in government speak translates to 'we're still hemorrhaging money, just slightly less spectacularly than anticipated.' It's like celebrating that your house fire only burned down three rooms instead of four.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

🎨 AI for Content Creators

SenseNova U1 with NEO-Unify just dropped

SenseNova drops their U1 model with something called NEO-Unify, because apparently we needed another acronym sandwich in the AI buffet. The GitHub and Hugging Face links are there for those brave enough to dive into whatever 'MoT' stands for this time.

r/StableDiffusion

GTA San Andreas - Live Action Movie Trailer

Someone made a live-action GTA San Andreas trailer that got nearly 3,000 upvotes, proving that nostalgia for stealing cars and following trains will never die. At least when AI makes terrible movies, we can blame it on following the damn train instead of following safety guidelines.

r/aivideo

Talkie, a 13B LM trained exclusively on pre-1931 data

Researchers created 'Talkie,' a 13B model trained exclusively on pre-1931 data, essentially giving us an AI that thinks the height of technology is sliced bread and radio serials. It's designed to test whether models actually learn or just regurgitate, which is ironic since it probably has very strong opinions about the gold standard and women's suffrage.

r/singularity

Flux 4B & 9B Outpaint Colour Query

Someone on r/FluxAI asked about Flux 4B and 9B outpainting with exactly one upvote, making it either a very niche technical question or proof that even AI enthusiasts have their limits. Sometimes the internet's indifference is the most honest review you'll get.

r/FluxAI

Jury selection in Musk v. Altman: ‘People don’t like him’

Jury selection for Musk v. Altman is proving challenging because potential jurors keep admitting they don't like Elon, which is about as surprising as water being wet. Finding twelve people without strong opinions about either tech billionaire might require expanding the search to remote Amish communities.

The Verge AI

OpenAI ends Microsoft legal peril over its $50B Amazon deal

OpenAI convinced Microsoft to let them play in Amazon's cloud sandbox while giving Microsoft a bigger slice of the revenue pie, proving that even $50 billion partnerships require the relationship skills of divorced parents sharing custody. Sometimes the best business deals are just elaborate ways to avoid admitting you need each other.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Meet the players who lost big money on Peter Molyneux’s failed Legacy

Peter Molyneux, the gaming industry's master of overpromise and underdeliver, has outdone himself by turning his latest vaporware into an NFT cash grab that imploded faster than you can say 'blockchain innovation.' Players who threw money at his 'Legacy' discovered the only thing they truly earned was a expensive lesson in why you should never trust a man who once convinced people that clicking a cube would change their lives.

Ars Technica

The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover, Like It or Not

Bloomberg's iconic green-screen temple of capitalism is getting a chatbot makeover because apparently even Wall Street traders need an AI assistant to help them lose money more efficiently. The company's CTO is diplomatically explaining why their users—who've been perfectly happy yelling at terminals since the 1980s—now need to have polite conversations with algorithms about market volatility.

Wired AI

Elon Musk and Sam Altman are going to court over OpenAI’s future

Two tech billionaires with god complexes are finally settling their playground dispute in court, where a judge will decide whether OpenAI gets to keep printing money as a for-profit or returns to its original nonprofit missionary work of 'democratizing AI.' The stakes couldn't be higher: either Sam Altman gets to proceed with his IPO victory lap, or Elon Musk gets the satisfaction of watching his former collaborator's empire crumble—a win-win for courtroom drama enthusiasts everywhere.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

GTFOBins

GTFOBins hits 181 points on Hacker News, which means either someone discovered a genuinely useful security tool or the collective hive mind is having another moment of existential dread about Unix binaries. Either way, expect at least 47 comments about how this could have been prevented with proper sandboxing.

Hacker News

Drizzle on top: a new high-end dog food brand is coming for the 1%

Golden Child raises $37 million to sell premium dog food 'drizzle' to people who apparently weren't spending enough on their pets already. Because nothing says late-stage capitalism quite like venture-funded condiments for creatures that literally eat garbage when left unsupervised.

TechCrunch

It’s a busy time for sci-fi, but don’t miss Aphelion

The article suggests sci-fi fans are 'overwhelmed' by current offerings including Project Hail Mary's box office dominance and various TV/gaming releases, though historically speaking, fans who binged entire Netflix series in 12-hour marathons can probably handle a few simultaneous space stories. Aphelion apparently deserves attention amid this supposed entertainment avalanche.

The Verge

🧩 ComfyUI

Comfy UI Sapiens2

Meta dropped Sapiens2, a transformer trained on a billion human images that can do pose estimation and body segmentation better than your creepy ex who still follows your Instagram. Someone spent their afternoon crafting ComfyUI nodes for it, because apparently we needed AI to get even better at analyzing human bodies.

r/comfyui

ZIT is by far my favorite image model

ZIT (Z-Image Turbo) has earned someone's undying devotion through a ComfyUI workflow featuring mysterious schedulers like 'Bong tangent' and something called 'Detail Daemon.' With only 10 steps at CFG 1, it's either remarkably efficient or this person has very low standards for their favorite things.

r/comfyui

🏠 Self-Hosted

It’s always DNS.

Someone's Proxmox decided to cosplay as a chaos monkey by silently dying, then resurrecting itself with a revenge plot involving duplicate DNS servers sharing the same IP address. The resulting digital apocalypse where nothing could resolve names is apparently so delightfully traumatic that our masochistic sysadmin recommends you try it too.

r/selfhosted

Safely expose Seerr

Our intrepid homelabber wants to publicly expose Seerr (the media request tool) after moving Jellyfin out from behind Tailscale's protective embrace, because apparently 2-3 concurrent viewers have turned friends and family into demanding media critics. The post cuts off mid-thought about Authentik authentication concerns, leaving us hanging like a Netflix series that got cancelled.

r/selfhosted

Glance Dashboard V.2 | GA

Another homelab warrior has achieved dashboard nirvana with Glance V.2, cramming full monitoring, VPN integrations, custom widgets, and Home Assistant into a Raspberry Pi 5 like it's some kind of digital clown car. They've reached that mythical 'where I want it' state while simultaneously admitting the eternal homelab truth: it's never actually finished.

r/selfhosted

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)

Speculative Speculative Decoding - ArXivIQ - Substack

Researchers dropped 'Speculative Speculative Decoding'—yes, they said speculative twice, presumably because regular speculation wasn't meta enough. The paper explores ways to make AI inference faster by essentially teaching models to hedge their bets on steroids.

SSD