The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Sunday, June 28, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 26°C ☀️ 💨 13 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 28°C ☀️ 💨 7 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 27°C ☀️ 💨 8 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 27°C ☀️ 💨 6 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 29°C ☀️ 💨 10 km/h Good
Toronto
☀️ 26°C
Clear
H: 26° / L: 15° · Wind ENE 13 km/h (gusts 19) · Humidity 52%
Mon ☁️ 27° / 17°
Tue ⛈️ 32° / 18° 💧40%
Wed ⛈️ 35° / 24° 💧28%
Thu ⛈️ 36° / 24° 💧20%
Fri ⛈️ 36° / 26° 💧28%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 27°C
Clear
H: 28° / L: 14° · Wind WNW 8 km/h · Humidity 46%
Mon ☁️ 29° / 16° 💧2%
Tue ⛈️ 32° / 19° 💧60%
Wed ⛈️ 29° / 20° 💧19%
Thu ⛈️ 32° / 21° 💧32%
Fri 🌦️ 31° / 20° 💧32%
Sudbury
☀️ 29°C
Clear
H: 30° / L: 14° · Wind S 10 km/h · Humidity 31%
Mon ☁️ 29° / 15° 💧15%
Tue ⛈️ 30° / 19° 💧43%
Wed ⛈️ 35° / 22° 💧43%
Thu ⛈️ 32° / 21° 💧42%
Fri 🌦️ 33° / 21° 💧26%

🚨 Breaking News

Weather: How hot will it be today?

Mother Nature apparently didn't get the memo that it's supposed to be a gradual warm-up to summer — she's going full blast furnace mode today with record-breaking June temperatures. Time to dust off those 'but it's a dry heat' jokes and pretend we're not slowly melting into the pavement.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times is doing that thing where they tease today's paper with all the enthusiasm of a grocery list, but buried in the corporate speak is news about rising expectations for U.S. involvement in Venezuela's ongoing political dumpster fire. Because apparently we weren't juggling enough international crises already.

World

Iran attacks Bahrain and Kuwait following US strikes and threatens to halt talks

Iran has decided to respond to U.S. airstrikes by launching drones and missiles at Bahrain and Kuwait, because nothing says 'let's have productive diplomatic talks' quite like explosive projectiles. The diplomatic chess match continues, except someone keeps flipping the board and setting the pieces on fire.

Breaking

🌍 World News

Two boys rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble after days of being trapped

Two boys were pulled from Venezuelan earthquake rubble after days buried alive, proving that sometimes the universe saves its miracles for when heavy machinery is stuck in bureaucratic limbo. Rescuers spent six hours on a delicate extraction while residents continue the grim lottery of digging through debris by hand.

BBC World

Trump Cut a Billion-Dollar Mining Deal. His Sons Stand to Profit.

Trump orchestrated a billion-dollar mining deal with Kazakhstan that coincidentally positions his sons to profit from one of the world's largest tungsten reserves—because apparently the family business model of 'proximity to power equals profit' transcends presidential terms. Nothing says 'conflict of interest' quite like rare earth minerals and Commerce Secretary connections.

NYT World

Ireland upstage world champions India to win T20 series at home

Ireland pulled off a stunning upset against cricket powerhouse India, winning their home T20 series by a single run in a nail-biter that had more drama than a Bollywood film. Meanwhile, teen prodigy Sooryavanshi watched from the sidelines, presumably learning that even world champions can faceplant on foreign soil.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Wildfire near endangered whooping crane nests sparks scientific opportunity

Mother Nature apparently decided to conduct her own field research on endangered whooping cranes by setting their neighborhood on fire. Scientists are optimistically calling this accidental arson a 'research opportunity' — because nothing says scientific breakthrough quite like your study subjects fleeing for their lives.

CBC Canada

Annual Pride Parade set to march through Toronto's downtown streets

Toronto's Pride Parade is marching through downtown while the city juggles dual celebrations of human diversity and the beautiful game of soccer. Nothing says multitasking like throwing a massive street party while simultaneously daydreaming about hosting the World Cup.

CBC Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

Wall Street Sees SpaceX Surpassing Nvidia in Long-Term Valuation

Wall Street apparently thinks launching rockets will eventually be more lucrative than making the chips that power AI—a bold bet that SpaceX's trajectory toward Mars beats Nvidia's dominance in digital dystopia. Either way, both companies are basically printing money while the rest of us argue about grocery prices.

Yahoo Finance

🎨 AI for Content Creators

China’s Z.ai claims it can match Mythos on cybersecurity

China's Zhipu AI claims their GLM-5.2 can keep up with Mythos in cybersecurity tasks, though it still trails the usual suspects from Anthropic and OpenAI in general intelligence. Nothing says 'we're catching up' quite like being good at one very specific thing while admitting you're behind everywhere else.

The Verge AI

Ford rehires ‘gray beard’ engineers after AI falls short

Ford discovered that firing experienced engineers and replacing them with AI doesn't magically produce quality cars—shocking absolutely no one who's ever worked in engineering. Now they're awkwardly rehiring the 'gray beards' they pushed out, because apparently institutional knowledge can't be prompt-engineered.

TechCrunch AI

Suno launches Spark incubator program to feed independent artists to its AI machine

Suno wants to transform from an AI music toy into a legit streaming platform by launching Spark, an incubator that offers grants and mentorship to unsigned artists. It's a clever pivot from 'AI slop generator' to 'AI slop generator with artist development aspirations'—though one wonders if the artists realize they're feeding the machine that might replace them.

The Verge AI

Why Wall Street thinks US memory maker Micron is the next Nvidia

Wall Street is desperately hunting for the 'next Nvidia' and has settled on memory maker Micron as their latest crush. Because nothing says sound investment strategy quite like frantically searching for any company with even tangential AI connections to ride the hype train.

TechCrunch AI

Prosecutors used ChatGPT logs as evidence in the Palisades fire trial

Prosecutors used ChatGPT logs as evidence against an arsonist linked to one of LA's deadliest wildfires, alongside the usual digital breadcrumbs of location data and security footage. Apparently even alleged criminals can't resist asking AI for advice—though one imagines 'how to commit arson' wasn't in ChatGPT's training guidelines.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

Underpromise, overdeliver? Hands-on with the $24,950 Slate auto.

The Slate auto costs more than a luxury sedan but offers the driving experience of an overpriced golf cart—205 miles of range for $25K means you're paying about $122 per mile of anxiety. At least when your other investments tank, you can still drive to the food bank.

Ars Technica

Trump Administration Allows Anthropic to Release Mythos to Select US Organizations

The Trump administration gave Anthropic permission to share its shiniest AI toy with select US organizations, because nothing says 'responsible AI deployment' like an exclusive club where membership is determined by political convenience. Mythos joins the growing list of AI models that are simultaneously too dangerous for public use and perfectly safe for government agencies.

Wired AI

The Download: brain-melting heatwaves and unprecedented OpenAI restrictions

Scientists are studying how heat waves scramble your brain, which explains why people still move to Phoenix voluntarily. Meanwhile, OpenAI is apparently implementing restrictions so unprecedented that even a tech newsletter writer couldn't be bothered to finish explaining what they actually are.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

GLM 5.2 beats Claude in our benchmarks

GLM 5.2 is strutting around claiming it beat Claude in benchmarks, which is like saying you won a race because you measured the track differently. The Hacker News crowd is predictably losing their minds over another AI model that's probably great at very specific tasks while still struggling to understand why humans find dad jokes funny.

Hacker News

California law targeting loud streaming ads takes effect on July 1

California finally decided that streaming ads don't need to sound like they're announcing the apocalypse every time someone wants to sell you car insurance. Starting July 1, your eardrums might actually survive the transition from whisper-quiet content to SUDDEN SCREAMING COMMERCIALS, assuming streaming platforms actually comply instead of finding creative loopholes.

TechCrunch

China’s Z.ai claims it can match Mythos on cybersecurity

China's Z.ai is flexing about matching Mythos in cybersecurity tasks, which sounds impressive until you realize it's like being the best student in one very specific class while still failing basic math. GLM-5.2 can apparently find bugs like a digital bloodhound, but don't expect it to help you write a decent email anytime soon.

The Verge

⭐ 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 built a skill that lets Claude generate Excalidraw diagrams, because nothing says 'professional presentation' like AI-generated stick figures and wonky arrows. Now your coding agents can create beautiful visualizations of how badly your architecture is designed. Finally, artificial intelligence with artistic pretensions.

Excalidraw Diagram Skill

GitHub - tanishqkumar/ssd: A lightweight inference engine supporting speculative speculative decoding (SSD). · GitHub

A new lightweight inference engine promises 'speculative speculative decoding' — yes, they said speculative twice, either for emphasis or because they're really uncertain about their speculation. It's called SSD, which either stands for the technique or describes how fast your storage needs to be to keep up with all that speculation. Double the speculation, double the fun, I suppose.

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.

Matt built DevTools for Claude Code because apparently we needed a way to visualize exactly how our AI assistant is burning through tokens and context windows. Now you can watch in real-time as your chatbot exceeds your monthly budget with the same morbid fascination as checking your bank account after a shopping spree. Free and open source, unlike your API costs.

claude-devtools

GitHub - LeoYeAI/openclaw-master-skills: 🧠 Curated collection of 1209+ best OpenClaw skills — weekly updated by MyClaw.ai

Someone curated 1,209+ OpenClaw skills and updates them weekly, because if you're going to hoard digital abilities, you might as well be thorough about it. It's like Pokémon cards for AI enthusiasts — gotta collect them all, even the ones that probably just say 'hello world' in different fonts. The real skill is maintaining this level of organizational obsession.

OpenClaw Master Skills

GitHub - vercel-labs/webreel: Record scripted browser demos as video · GitHub

Vercel's WebReel lets you record scripted browser demos as videos, perfect for creating those seamless product demos where nothing ever goes wrong. No more awkward live presentations where your internet decides to take a coffee break mid-pitch. It's automation for people who've been burned by Murphy's Law one too many times.

webreel