The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 30°C ☀️ 💨 23 km/h (gusts 40) Good
105 km
Barrie 32°C ⛈️ 💨 17 km/h Caution
65 km
Honey Harbour 29°C ⛈️ 💨 11 km/h (gusts 23) Caution
55 km
Parry Sound 28°C ⛈️ 💨 16 km/h (gusts 38) Caution
165 km
Sudbury 29°C ⛈️ 💨 17 km/h (gusts 31) Caution
Toronto
☀️ 30°C
Clear
H: 31° / L: 19° · Wind SSW 23 km/h (gusts 40) · Humidity 64%
Wed ⛈️ 37° / 22° 💧13%
Thu ⛈️ 35° / 22° 💧37%
Fri ⛈️ 34° / 22° 💧31%
Sat ⛈️ 33° / 22° 💧35%
Sun ☁️ 28° / 20° 💧24%
Honey Harbour
⛈️ 29°C
Thunderstorm
H: 31° / L: 20° · Wind W 11 km/h (gusts 23) · Humidity 78%
Wed ⛈️ 31° / 23° 💧15%
Thu ⛈️ 30° / 20° 💧23%
Fri ⛈️ 31° / 19° 💧27%
Sat 🌦️ 24° / 18° 💧36%
Sun ☁️ 23° / 15° 💧24%
Sudbury
⛈️ 29°C
Thunderstorm
H: 30° / L: 21° · Wind SW 17 km/h (gusts 31) · Humidity 75%
Wed ⛈️ 32° / 22° 💧14%
Thu ⛈️ 31° / 21° 💧34%
Fri ☁️ 32° / 16° 💧18%
Sat 🌧️ 22° / 18° 💧28%
Sun ☁️ 27° / 16° 💧17%

🚨 Breaking News

Weather: How hot will it be today?

Mother Nature's apparently decided June needed more drama, so she's cranking up the heat to record-breaking levels because regular summer temperatures are for quitters. Hope you enjoyed that brief moment when going outside didn't feel like opening an oven door.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The Supreme Court delivered a judicial double-feature today: they told everyone the Fed can keep doing Fed things without presidential tantrums affecting employment, while also clarifying that Trump can still fire other agency heads when the mood strikes. It's like constitutional job security with a presidential asterisk.

World

🌍 World News

Americans react to Supreme Court upholding birthright citizenship

The Supreme Court upheld birthright citizenship, prompting Americans to share their feelings with the BBC—because apparently we needed confirmation that the 14th Amendment still exists. Reactions ranged from relief to outrage, which pretty much sums up every Supreme Court ruling since the invention of Twitter.

BBC World

The Hidden Dead: The True Toll in Venezuela Is Buried Under Rubble

Venezuela's official earthquake death toll sits at 1,719, but experts suspect that number is as buried as the victims still trapped under collapsed buildings. Five days post-disaster, the true scale of devastation remains hidden beneath rubble and bureaucratic underreporting—a grim reminder that natural disasters don't just kill people, they kill accurate statistics too.

NYT World

What is birthright citizenship, and what does the Supreme Court ruling say?

The Supreme Court struck down an executive order attempting to restrict birthright citizenship, reaffirming that the Constitution means what it says about babies born on US soil. Turns out you can't executive-order your way around the 14th Amendment—who could have predicted that centuries-old legal precedent would be so stubbornly persistent?

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

U.S.-inspired World Cup beaver vandalized in Toronto

Toronto vandals have targeted a World Cup beaver sculpture, apparently taking issue with its American inspiration — because nothing says 'Canadian pride' like defacing public art over rodent nationality disputes.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Strategy Announces $2 Billion Stock Buyback Program

Strategy Corp just announced they're buying back $2 billion of their own stock, because apparently the best investment they can find is... themselves. Nothing says 'we're out of growth ideas' quite like a massive share repurchase program.

Yahoo Finance

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Google’s NotebookLM can sum up your research in a TikTok-style clip

Google's NotebookLM now transforms your research notes into 60-second vertical AI videos, because apparently even academic summaries need to dance for attention spans shorter than a goldfish. Finally, you can procrastinate on your actual research by watching AI-generated clips about your procrastination notes.

The Verge AI

OpenClaw is finally available on Android and iOS

OpenClaw, the free open-source agentic program, has clawed its way onto mobile devices. Now your phone can join your laptop in the grand experiment of letting AI agents loose on your digital life.

TechCrunch AI

Netflix is using an AI-generated Gene Wilder voice in its Willy Wonka reality show

Netflix's Willy Wonka reality show will feature an AI-generated Gene Wilder voice, because nothing says 'authentic childhood magic' like synthetic vocals from a deceased beloved actor. At least the sets are real this time, unlike that Glasgow chocolate factory disaster that looked like it was designed by someone who'd only heard Wonka described through interpretive dance.

The Verge AI

Libby will filter out AI content, kind of

Libby's new CEO promises to filter out AI content 'kind of,' which is about as reassuring as a lifeguard who can 'kind of' swim. The ebook lending app is treating AI as their 'new frontier,' presumably because calling it 'an unavoidable digital plague' doesn't test well with focus groups.

The Verge AI

Google introduces a faster, cheaper image generator with Nano Banana 2 Lite

Google's new 'Nano Banana 2 Lite' image generator promises faster, cheaper AI content creation, because apparently we needed to make the flood of synthetic imagery even more accessible. The name suggests Google's marketing team either has a sense of humor or has completely given up on dignity.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Trump's plan to redesign every .gov website leads to AI-designed horrors

Trump's grand vision to AI-ify every government website has predictably devolved into a digital hellscape, with the National Design Studio quietly pumping the brakes after a year of what I can only assume are Lovecraftian user interfaces. Apparently even artificial intelligence draws the line at making the DMV website aesthetically pleasing.

Ars Technica

Bernie Sanders Saw This Coming

Bernie Sanders continues his decades-long tradition of being chronically correct about wealth inequality, now pivoting to tell us that tech billionaires and unchecked AI might be bad for democracy. The man has elevated 'I told you so' to an art form, and frankly, at this point we should just give him a crystal ball and call it official.

Wired AI

Roundtables: Longevity’s Next Frontier: “Reprogramming” Your Body

Scientists are drowning in billions of dollars trying to crack the code on cellular reprogramming to reverse aging, because apparently death is just another subscription service we need to cancel. The real question isn't whether these treatments will work, but whether we're ready for a world where your mortgage outlasts your great-great-grandchildren.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Claude Sonnet 5

Claude Sonnet 5 has arrived and managed to rack up 715 points on Hacker News, which means it's either genuinely impressive or the AI hype machine is running on premium fuel again. Given the complete lack of details in this headline, I'm leaning toward the latter, but hey, at least the number-crunchers are excited.

Hacker News

OpenClaw is finally available on Android and iOS

OpenClaw, the free open source agentic program, has finally made its way to your pocket because apparently we needed AI agents following us around 24/7. Nothing says 'digital liberation' quite like voluntarily installing software that's designed to act autonomously on your most personal device.

TechCrunch

Amazon fined $2.25 million for failing to help identity theft victims

Amazon got slapped with a $2.25 million fine for stonewalling identity theft victims who had the audacity to ask for help with fraudulent purchases on their accounts. For a company that knows when you're running low on toilet paper before you do, their sudden amnesia about suspicious transactions is impressively selective.

The Verge

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)