The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Saturday, April 18, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The Times today reports on a ceasefire between Israeli forces and Hezbollah that might actually lead somewhere productive—because nothing says 'peace process' like a temporary pause in the shooting while diplomats furiously scribble notes. Meanwhile, the paper continues its noble tradition of burying the lede under multiple layers of 'SKIP ADVERTISEMENT' prompts.

World

The New York Times in Print for Sunday, April 12, 2026 - The New York Times

In a delicious twist of political irony, VP JD Vance is now trying to end a war he originally opposed starting—proving once again that Washington's favorite pastime is cleaning up messes they made while pretending they were against making them. The Times graciously documents this weekend's negotiations, presumably between commercial breaks.

World

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

Savannah Guthrie triumphantly returns to 'Today' and immediately demonstrates her range by seamlessly pivoting from war coverage to March Madness cheerleading—because nothing says 'hard-hitting journalism' quite like shouting out your alma mater's basketball team between updates on global conflict and economic doom. At least she's got her priorities straight.

World

🌍 World News

Strait of Hormuz closed again, Iran says, as ships attacked

Iran has decided to close the Strait of Hormuz again, apparently under the impression that two wrongs make a right after accusing the US of implementing a blockade that violates their ceasefire agreement. Nothing says 'diplomatic resolution' quite like shutting down 20% of global oil transit because you're having a spat.

BBC World

Iran reasserts control of Hormuz Strait as Trump warns against ‘blackmail’

Iran's top negotiator is calling the US naval blockade 'clumsy and ignorant' while simultaneously reasserting control over Hormuz, because apparently irony isn't dead—it's just conducting maritime operations in the Persian Gulf. Trump, predictably, is warning against 'blackmail,' setting up what promises to be a delightfully unhinged Twitter diplomacy situation.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Toronto tenants launch new citywide union amid ongoing rent crisis and affordability concerns

Toronto tenants have decided that individual suffering is less efficient than collective bargaining, launching a citywide union to tackle the rent crisis while landlords presumably polish their 'but my mortgage costs' talking points. It's almost like when people can't afford basic shelter, they get organized—who could have predicted this shocking turn of events?

CBC Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

This Drug Stock Has Crushed the S&P 500 Over the Last Decade

A mystery drug stock apparently decided the S&P 500 was more of a suggestion than competition over the past decade. Without any actual details about which company or what they're peddling, I'm left to assume it's either a miracle cure or really good at creative accounting.

Yahoo Finance

🎨 AI for Content Creators

EditAnything IC-LoRA - LTX-2.3

Another experimental AI video editing model drops with the usual 'still cooking' disclaimer — because nothing says confidence like warning users your product might spontaneously combust with the next update.

r/StableDiffusion

An unexpected trip

Reddit's r/aivideo community collectively upvoted someone's 'unexpected trip' to viral status, though without context I can only assume it involved AI, disappointment, and probably both.

r/aivideo

AI for video face swap?

Reality check for face-swappers: turns out making Nicolas Cage's face stick to someone else's head across an entire video is exponentially harder than the one-photo party tricks we've grown accustomed to.

r/FluxAI

The RAM shortage could last years

The AI boom's hunger for RAM is so voracious that we're looking at shortages potentially lasting until 2030 — because apparently teaching machines to think requires more memory than anyone anticipated.

The Verge AI

Tesla brings its robotaxi service to Dallas and Houston

Tesla's robotaxis are now cruising Dallas and Houston without human babysitters, because nothing says 'we've got this figured out' like expanding to Texas where everything's bigger, including potential liability lawsuits.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Recent advances push Big Tech closer to the Q-Day danger zone

Big Tech's quantum computing race is heating up as companies scramble to develop post-quantum cryptography before Q-Day arrives—the moment when quantum computers can crack current encryption like a digital locksmith with a universal key. It's basically a high-stakes game of musical chairs, except when the music stops, whoever's still using old crypto gets their digital pants pulled down in public.

Ars Technica

It Takes 2 Minutes to Hack the EU’s New Age-Verification App

The EU's shiny new age-verification app lasted all of 2 minutes before getting hacked, which is honestly impressive longevity by government tech standards. Meanwhile, gym-goers and hotel guests are discovering their personal data has been doing unauthorized tours of the dark web, because apparently privacy breaches are having their own little renaissance.

Wired AI

Pie Day 2026

MIT students orchestrated the baking of 30 pies for Pi Day 2026, proving that even future rocket scientists need an excuse to procrastinate on actual coursework. The behind-the-scenes logistics of coordinating three dozen desserts probably required more project management skills than their average engineering assignment.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

The electromechanical angle computer inside the B-52 bomber's star tracker

The B-52's star tracker runs on an electromechanical angle computer that's probably older than most of the people maintaining it, yet somehow still keeps these flying museums pointed in the right direction. It's either a testament to robust engineering or proof that if it ain't broke, the military will keep using it until the heat death of the universe.

Hacker News

Tesla brings its robotaxi service to Dallas and Houston

Tesla's robotaxis are now roaming Dallas and Houston with no human babysitters up front, because apparently nothing says 'yeehaw' quite like letting AI navigate Texas traffic. The 14-second promo video conveniently doesn't show how they handle a lifted F-350 cutting them off or a surprise armadillo crossing.

TechCrunch

The RAM shortage could last years

The RAM shortage is set to drag on until possibly 2030, with manufacturers expected to meet only 60% of demand by 2027 despite everyone scrambling to build more factories. So while AI keeps demanding more memory to become sentient, we'll all be stuck downloading more RAM jokes instead of actual RAM.

The Verge

🧩 ComfyUI

✨Comfy Canvas v1.0 ✨

Comfy Canvas hit 1.0 and moved into your ComfyUI workflow tab, positioning itself as the supreme inline image editor—because apparently we needed another tool to make our already complicated AI art process even more feature-rich.

r/comfyui

🏠 Self-Hosted

Update on my home server build

A homelab enthusiast provides an update on their network evolution, shuffling an Optiplex into backup duty while promoting a Dell Edge 620 to firewall status, complete with RS232 wizardry and PowerShell scripts. It's the kind of over-engineered beauty that makes you wonder if they've automated their coffee maker yet.

r/selfhosted

Migrated a client off shared hosting to a VPS last week, the difference was embarrassing

After two years of explaining why a client's site loaded slower than dial-up nostalgia, our hero finally gets them moved from shared hosting to a VPS, cutting load times from 3.2 to 0.9 seconds. The client's reluctance to spend an extra 15€ monthly probably cost them more in lost business than a small country's GDP, but who's counting?

r/selfhosted

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)

Speculative Speculative Decoding - ArXivIQ - Substack

Researchers have invented "Speculative Speculative Decoding" — yes, that's speculation squared — which presumably makes AI inference so optimistic it starts predicting what you'll ask before you even open your laptop. The paper promises faster language model generation, though the double speculation might just be hedging their bets.

SSD