The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 27°C ☁️ 💨 5 km/h 👁 6 km Good
105 km
Barrie 24°C ☁️ 💨 16 km/h (gusts 27) 👁 6 km Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 23°C ☁️ 💨 14 km/h (gusts 32) 👁 5 km Good
55 km
Parry Sound 24°C ☁️ 💨 14 km/h 👁 4 km Caution
165 km
Sudbury 28°C ☀️ 💨 17 km/h (gusts 32) 👁 7 km Good
Toronto
☁️ 27°C
Overcast
H: 27° / L: 22° · Wind SW 5 km/h · Humidity 58%
Thu ☁️ 30° / 20° 💧2%
Fri ☁️ 27° / 17° 💧20%
Sat ⛈️ 27° / 19° 💧87%
Sun ☁️ 24° / 17° 💧38%
Mon ☁️ 25° / 16° 💧29%
Honey Harbour
☁️ 23°C
Overcast
H: 24° / L: 19° · Wind WNW 14 km/h (gusts 32) · Humidity 76%
Thu ☁️ 25° / 17°
Fri 🌦️ 28° / 12° 💧47%
Sat 🌧️ 25° / 16° 💧83%
Sun ☁️ 21° / 14° 💧31%
Mon 🌦️ 24° / 13° 💧48%
Sudbury
☀️ 28°C
Clear
H: 29° / L: 19° · Wind NW 17 km/h (gusts 32) · Humidity 33%
Thu ☁️ 27° / 17° 💧1%
Fri ☁️ 28° / 12° 💧50%
Sat 🌦️ 20° / 13° 💧76%
Sun ☁️ 24° / 9° 💧11%
Mon 🌦️ 25° / 13° 💧54%

🚨 Breaking News

Justices tell Congress of threats to Supreme Court safety in push for more security

Two Supreme Court justices awkwardly found themselves having to explain to Congress why people keep threatening them, presumably while maintaining the fiction that this is somehow surprising in today's America. Nothing says 'independent judiciary' quite like hat-in-hand budget meetings where you have to justify why death threats might require actual security measures.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times apparently decided their headline writers needed a day off, leaving us with the journalistic equivalent of 'Untitled Document 1.' What we can glean is something about shipping fees in the Strait of Hormuz potentially making your gas even more expensive, because apparently global energy wasn't quite volatile enough already.

World

🌍 World News

French MPs approve assisted dying law with strict rules after years of argument

French lawmakers finally passed an assisted dying bill after what I can only assume were years of very lively Parliamentary debates about mortality. The legislation allows terminally ill adults to receive assistance under strict criteria, because apparently even in death, France requires proper paperwork.

BBC World

Iran War Live Updates: U.S. and Iran Exchange Strikes for Fifth Straight Day

The US and Iran are now locked in their fifth consecutive day of military back-and-forth, like the world's most dangerous game of ping-pong. Both sides continue launching strikes with the stubborn determination of toddlers refusing to share toys, except these toys have the potential to destabilize an entire region.

NYT World

Iran says peace deal voided, fighting ‘existential war’ after US attacks

Iran has officially declared any peace deals null and void, announcing they're fighting an 'existential war' following fresh US attacks on multiple Iranian cities. Nothing quite says 'diplomatic relations are going well' quite like explosions in three different locations and existential crisis declarations.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Orange warning issued for poor air quality, heavy smoke in Toronto: Environment Canada

Toronto's air quality is so abysmal from wildfire smoke that the city ranks among the world's worst breathing destinations this week — a dubious tourism slogan if there ever was one. Environment Canada suggests staying indoors, which is basically asking Torontonians to become shut-ins until Mother Nature stops having a tantrum.

CBC Toronto

Actor Joanna Pettet was a mysterious darling of the stage and screen

Montreal-raised actor Joanna Pettet was once Hollywood's 'terribly ambitious' rising star before mysteriously vanishing from the spotlight like a celebrity Houdini act. Nothing says peak intrigue quite like someone who conquered stages and screens only to ghost their entire career.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Microsoft CEO adds fuel to Palantir CEO’s AI warning

Microsoft's CEO apparently decided to echo Palantir's boss on AI dangers, because nothing says 'we're totally in control of this technology' like public hand-wringing from the people building it. When tech titans start sounding alarm bells about their own products, it's either genuine concern or the world's most expensive humble-brag.

Yahoo Finance

United earnings top estimates but airline expects $6 billion in added fuel costs

United Airlines beat earnings expectations but immediately dampened the mood by announcing $6 billion in additional fuel costs, because nothing kills a financial victory lap quite like remembering you still need to actually fly the planes. The airline managed to squeeze more revenue from both budget travelers and premium passengers, proving that misery truly loves company at 30,000 feet.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

AI slop movies are the new direct-to-video cash grabs

While Nolan prepares to mint money with his Odyssey adaptation, the direct-to-video industry has found its new bottom feeder: AI-generated movies that make those old Steven Seagal cashgrabs look like artistic masterpieces. Because apparently we needed to automate creative bankruptcy too.

The Verge AI

Suno snatched millions of songs from YouTube, Genius, and Deezer

Suno's 'mysterious' training data turns out to be millions of pilfered songs from YouTube, Deezer, and Genius—shocking absolutely no one who understands how AI companies actually operate. The real surprise is that someone had to hack them to reveal what was already painfully obvious.

The Verge AI

SpaceX falls to $135 IPO price ahead of Starship launch

SpaceX's stock tumbled to $135 as investors apparently remembered that Elon's promises have the structural integrity of his Cybertruck windows. Even the market is developing immunity to hype-driven valuations.

TechCrunch AI

OpenAI finally launches hardware… for Codex

OpenAI's grand hardware debut is... a square block of buttons for their coding platform, not the Jony Ive collaboration currently drowning in lawsuits. It's like expecting the iPhone and getting a very expensive calculator.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

How hard is it to build orbital data centers, actually?

Turns out launching data centers into space is mostly a radiator problem—who knew that keeping servers cool in the vacuum of space would involve expensive, heavy equipment? Some optimistic engineers think they can solve centuries of thermodynamics with the power of making things 'cheap and light,' because that's definitely how physics works.

Ars Technica

AI Isn’t Smarter Than a Baby—Yet

Scientists have discovered that babies are better learning machines than our trillion-dollar AI models, which is either humbling for Silicon Valley or explains why both cry when they don't get what they want. Apparently the secret to artificial intelligence was sitting in diapers all along, just waiting for us to reverse-engineer naptime.

Wired AI

Meet GPT-Red: an LLM super-hacker OpenAI built to make its models safer

OpenAI created GPT-Red, an AI hacker designed to attack their own models so they can build better defenses—basically giving their AI trust issues and calling it security. It's like hiring a professional burglar to test your locks, except the burglar is also made of math and probably doesn't need to eat.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Inkling: Our Open-Weights Model

Another day, another AI company drops an 'open-weights' model and watches Hacker News collectively lose its mind with 443 upvotes—because nothing says cutting-edge innovation like a name that sounds like a squid's drawing utensil.

Hacker News

xAI sues a man for using Grok to generate CSAM ‘deepfakes’

xAI discovers that building an AI chatbot without bulletproof safeguards is like leaving your front door open and then acting shocked when someone walks in to commit crimes—now they're suing the South Carolina man who used Grok to generate illegal content, which is rich coming from the 'move fast and break things' crowd.

The Verge

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)