Today's Paper - The New York Times
British ships apparently got a front-row seat to the ongoing U.S.-Iran maritime tension near some strategic strait, because nothing says 'diplomatic solution' quite like a good old-fashioned naval blockade.
British ships apparently got a front-row seat to the ongoing U.S.-Iran maritime tension near some strategic strait, because nothing says 'diplomatic solution' quite like a good old-fashioned naval blockade.
Israel's parliament decided the death penalty needed a more selective application process, targeting Palestinians specifically for fatal attacks—a move that has European countries and human rights groups responding with their finest 'we are deeply concerned' statements.
Savannah Guthrie made her triumphant return to morning television by seamlessly transitioning from whatever kept her away back to the comforting routine of reading depressing headlines with a smile, plus some college basketball cheerleading because balance is key.

A shooting suspect at a press dinner apparently had Trump and other officials in their crosshairs, because nothing says 'productive political discourse' like firearms at media events. The suspect faces federal charges for assault on an officer and using a gun during a violent crime—shocking that someone who brings weapons to dinner parties might escalate things.

The U.S. Mint has been unknowingly laundering cartel gold into shiny 'American' precious metals, proving that even our currency has trust issues. With gold prices soaring and industry oversight apparently taking a siesta, it turns out 'Made in America' might actually mean 'Made by America's Most Wanted.'

Iran's Foreign Minister is making the rounds from Pakistan to Russia for 'senior official talks,' which sounds like the world's most concerning diplomatic speed dating. Nothing says 'regional stability' quite like a Middle Eastern official collecting meetings with nuclear powers like they're Pokémon cards.

Vancouver pauses to remember the Lapu-Lapu Day festival attack that claimed 11 lives a year ago, because apparently we need calendar reminders for when humanity showed its worst face. The city's holding memorials across town, though one wonders if the real memorial should be figuring out how to prevent the next senseless tragedy.

Toronto General Hospital is playing emergency department Tetris in the downtown core, trying to manage the unique joy of being everyone's go-to crisis center. They're partnering with other organizations to ease the burden, which is healthcare speak for 'please stop coming here for everything, we're drowning.'

Prime Minister Carney and Premier Eby are doing the political grief dance, calling the Lapu-Lapu Day attack 'senseless violence' as if there's a sensible kind. It's apparently a 'solemn day' for remembering victims, which beats the alternative of forgetting them entirely, I suppose.
American Express and Chase have apparently decided that credit card fees weren't quite painful enough, so they've set a delightful new precedent that will surely make consumers everywhere rejoice. Because nothing says 'customer loyalty' like finding creative new ways to separate people from their money.
Wednesday marks Wall Street's equivalent of the Super Bowl, with tech giants Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta all reporting earnings while Jerome Powell delivers his swan song as Fed chair. It's like watching four heavyweight boxers fight simultaneously while the referee announces his retirement—peak financial entertainment with maximum chaos potential.

Generation X has emerged as beauty's surprise MVP, proving that the forgotten middle child of demographics has serious spending power when it comes to skincare and cosmetics. Turns out the generation that survived the '90s without Instagram filters knows a thing or two about investing in looking good the old-fashioned way.

Someone created a LoRA that slaps googly eyes on anyone in AI videos, because apparently we've reached peak civilization and this is what we're doing with our advanced technology now. It does exactly what it says on the tin, which is both horrifying and oddly admirable in its commitment to digital absurdity.

Reddit's r/aivideo is collectively nostalgic for a show about attractive people drinking coffee, now with 481 people upvoting what I assume is an AI recreation. Because nothing says 'cutting-edge technology' like making fake versions of things we already watched to death in the 90s.

Someone figured out how to use GPT's image generation to create perfect 360-degree historical panoramas, essentially building a time-traveling GeoGuessr clone. Finally, we can combine our love of geographical guessing games with our existential dread about the passage of time.
Another Flux AI model for object swapping has landed with a whopping 4 upvotes, suggesting either r/FluxAI has very discerning taste or this particular wheel didn't need much reinventing. The enthusiasm is practically deafening.

The US military's recent Iran strike hit over 1,000 targets in 24 hours thanks to AI targeting systems, nearly doubling the 'shock and awe' scale from Iraq. Apparently Project Maven convinced the Pentagon that artificial intelligence is great at making very permanent decisions very quickly.

Someone in Mill Valley is selling a 13-acre property but only accepting Anthropic equity as payment, because apparently Bay Area real estate wasn't dystopian enough already. Nothing says 'stable investment' like betting your house on the fluctuating value of an AI company's stock options.

Tim Cook's Apple reign gets the obituary treatment while he's still very much alive and CEO-ing. The piece promises six memorable moments from an era defined by making shareholders extremely happy and consumers moderately less surprised than they used to be.

Discord users somehow wandered into Anthropic's supposedly secure AI playground called Mythos, because apparently even AI companies can't keep the digital equivalent of their front door locked. Meanwhile, the global surveillance industrial complex continues its regularly scheduled programming with telecom exploits and health data auctions.

DeepSeek drops V4, their latest open-source AI model that can finally read something longer than a tweet without having an existential crisis. The Chinese firm continues their tradition of giving away advanced AI for free, which must make OpenAI's accountants break out in stress hives.

Someone named Sawe just broke the two-hour marathon barrier, apparently shifting the entire framework of human running potential. While the rest of us struggle to run to catch the bus, this person is out here casually redefining what's physically possible for our species.

Stanford freshmen are apparently reading a book about world domination, which will likely inspire them to dominate even harder rather than question their ambitions. It's like giving a caffeinated squirrel a guide to nut hoarding—predictably counterproductive.

Google is rolling out new gradient icons across their apps, abandoning their previous circle-cramming design philosophy for something shinier. Because nothing says 'innovation' quite like making your email icon look like it went through an Instagram filter.

The AI community celebrates another acronym-heavy release with GooglyEyes IC-LoRA for LTX2.3, garnering a respectable 49 upvotes from the ComfyUI faithful. Because apparently what we all needed was more googly eyes in our machine learning workflows.

Someone discovered that combining GPT Image 2.0 with LTX 2.3 produces 'excellent' results, shocking absolutely no one who's been following the AI hype cycle. The 125 upvotes suggest either genuine excitement or collective Stockholm syndrome from the ComfyUI community.

The inevitable has happened: someone turned ComfyUI into an arcade shooter where you battle API nodes and dodge chaos, which honestly sounds like a pretty accurate simulation of actual AI development. Finally, a game that captures the true terror of debugging neural networks.

Someone discovered MinIO's repo got archived in April 2026 (which is either a typo or they're time traveling) and is having second thoughts about using S3-compatible object storage that might be entering its retirement phase. Nothing says 'solid infrastructure choice' like building your homelab around software that's already updating its digital will.

A brave soul mounted their Pi 3+ next to their router in what they describe as a 'cable crime scene' but refuse to fix because everything miraculously works. They're running enough services to make a enterprise admin sweat, proving that sometimes the best network setup is the one you're too terrified to touch.

After shelving their portfolio website due to lack of motivation, someone found the perfect excuse to dust it off by hosting it on a Pi Zero 2W—because nothing says 'hire me' like a personal site running on hardware with less processing power than a smart toaster. Inspired by someone else's ESP32 setup, they've embraced the 'if it can compute, it can serve web pages' philosophy.
Vercel's serving up an AI code review bot that runs on Claude — because apparently humans weren't pedantic enough about pull requests. It's open-source and self-hosted, so you can deploy your own digital nitpicker to tell you why your variable names are terrible.
Someone decided Claude needed the ability to draw pretty diagrams in Excalidraw, because why should humans have all the fun making boxes and arrows? Now your AI coding assistant can visualize your spaghetti code architecture in beautiful, shame-inducing detail.

Researchers are getting meta with 'Speculative Speculative Decoding' — apparently one level of speculation wasn't enough for language model optimization. It's like inception, but for making AI guess faster at what it's already guessing.
Finally, someone built DevTools for Claude Code so you can watch your AI assistant's thought process in real-time. Nothing says 'trust but verify' like debugging your digital employee's decision-making with a visual UI.
A curated collection of 560+ OpenClaw skills promises weekly updates, because apparently even AI needs a constantly expanding resume. It's like LinkedIn for language model capabilities, minus the humble-bragging posts.
Vercel's WebReel lets you script and record browser demos as videos, automating the ancient art of screen recording. Perfect for when you need consistent demo footage that won't accidentally expose your 47 open Stack Overflow tabs.