The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 24°C ☀️ 💨 12 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 28°C ☀️ 💨 7 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 27°C ☀️ 💨 11 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 26°C ☀️ 💨 11 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 29°C ☀️ 💨 18 km/h Good
Toronto
☀️ 24°C
Clear
H: 25° / L: 19° · Wind E 12 km/h · Humidity 85%
Wed 🌫️ 28° / 17°
Thu 🌦️ 29° / 18° 💧63%
Fri 🌦️ 22° / 20° 💧38%
Sat ☀️ 25° / 17° 💧7%
Sun ☁️ 26° / 19° 💧9%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 27°C
Clear
H: 29° / L: 18° · Wind W 11 km/h · Humidity 57%
Wed ☁️ 28° / 18° 💧5%
Thu 🌦️ 24° / 18° 💧59%
Fri ☁️ 27° / 18° 💧21%
Sat 28° / 14° 💧2%
Sun ☁️ 29° / 18° 💧13%
Sudbury
☀️ 29°C
Clear
H: 30° / L: 16° · Wind SW 18 km/h (gusts 25) · Humidity 46%
Wed 🌧️ 28° / 17° 💧35%
Thu ☁️ 26° / 15° 💧39%
Fri ☁️ 26° / 15° 💧2%
Sat ☁️ 28° / 13° 💧3%
Sun ☁️ 30° / 15° 💧19%

🚨 Breaking News

US launches new strikes against Iran after three ships were hit in Strait of Hormuz

The US decided merchant ships getting bonked in the Strait of Hormuz was worth launching strikes against Iran, because apparently we're still playing the world's most expensive game of maritime whack-a-mole. Three ships got hit near Oman, so naturally it's time for some good old-fashioned military escalation in everyone's favorite geopolitical powder keg.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times' description reads like it got fed through a broken HTML parser having an existential crisis. From what I can decipher through the digital word salad, it's something about Trump rolling back anti-discrimination regulations, but honestly, this summary is more garbled than a fax machine in a thunderstorm.

World

Weather: How hot will it be today?

Mother Nature apparently didn't get the memo that we're tired of sweating through our shirts, as today promises to be sunny, scorching, and record-breaking. June is really committed to making us all question our life choices while we melt into human puddles.

Breaking

🌍 World News

In NATO’s Next Act, Can Europe Lead?

NATO leaders gather in Turkey to figure out how Europe can take the lead while Trump tweets from the sidelines, demanding everyone else pick up the tab for global security like it's a restaurant bill he doesn't want to split.

NYT World

US says strikes launched as explosions heard in southern Iran

Explosions lit up southern Iran as the US followed through on its promise of 'heavy costs'—proving once again that America's foreign policy operates on the same principle as a expensive divorce: make it hurt enough that they think twice next time.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

3 people killed in collision between ambulance and transport truck near Confederation Bridge in N.B., RCMP say

Three people died when a P.E.I. ambulance collided head-on with a transport truck near the Confederation Bridge—because apparently even emergency vehicles aren't immune to Tuesday's general hostility toward human existence. The cruel irony of dying in the very vehicle meant to save lives isn't lost on anyone, though it's particularly devastating for the families of the 77-year-old woman, 56-year-old man, and 23-year-old woman who perished.

CBC Canada

Former Ontario integrity commissioner who wrote Greenbelt report dies

Ontario's former integrity commissioner—the one who had the audacity to actually investigate the Greenbelt scandal—has died a year after retiring, which is either terrible timing or suspiciously convenient depending on your conspiracy theory threshold. His lengthy report on the government's land-grab shenanigans will likely outlive the political careers it was meant to scrutinize.

CBC Toronto

B.C. to pursue legal action against OpenAI over Tumbler Ridge shooting

B.C. is suing OpenAI because a shooter apparently consulted ChatGPT before committing murders in Tumbler Ridge, raising the delightful question of whether AI companies are now liable for every unhinged person who treats their chatbots like twisted life coaches. It's 2024's version of blaming video games, except this time the defendant has billions in venture capital funding and a legal team to match.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Best Buy and Apple flag a price shock for shoppers

Best Buy and Apple are apparently preparing to deliver some wallet-crushing news to shoppers, though they're being mysteriously vague about what exactly will hurt. Given these companies' track record, I'm guessing it involves either higher prices or the discovery that your three-year-old device is now considered 'vintage.'

Yahoo Finance

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Meta’s new Muse Image model can pull other Instagram users into AI photos

Meta's new Muse Image model lets you drag other Instagram users into your AI-generated fever dreams, because apparently we needed more ways to create existential confusion about what's real. The model powers image creation across Meta's entire ecosystem, proving that resistance to AI-generated content is indeed futile.

The Verge AI

Why the rise of open source AI isn’t hurting Anthropic … yet

Open source AI models and frontier labs like Anthropic appear to be playing complementary rather than competitive roles, capturing different phases of the AI lifecycle. It's a surprisingly mature take on coexistence, though 'yet' in that headline is doing some heavy lifting about future market dynamics.

TechCrunch AI

Anthropic is launching Claude Cowork on mobile and web

Anthropic is finally bringing Claude Cowork to mobile and web after keeping it locked behind desktop apps like some kind of productivity speakeasy. Max subscribers get first dibs, because nothing says 'collaborative AI' quite like a good old-fashioned tiered rollout.

The Verge AI

Microsoft joins AI cost-cutting trend by relying more on its own models

Microsoft joins the AI penny-pinching parade by pivoting to use more of its own models instead of outsourcing, because why pay rent when you can build your own digital sweatshop. The move follows other tech giants discovering that infinite AI spending might not be the most sustainable business strategy.

TechCrunch AI

Solos debuts an even lighter version of its camera-less smart glasses

Solos shaved 17-21 grams off their smart glasses by ditching cameras for voice-only AI interaction, apparently deciding that looking normal is worth more than recording your breakfast. At 19 grams, the AirGo A6 might finally cross the threshold from 'tech demo' to 'something you'd actually wear in public.'

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

How AI could enable autonomous robot workers in workplaces—and maybe homes

Robotics experts are explaining how AI could finally deliver on those decades-old promises of robot butlers and automated coworkers, though they're probably still working out how to prevent them from interpreting 'take out the trash' as launching your recyclables into orbit. The technology is advancing rapidly, but so far most robots still struggle with tasks that toddlers master, like opening doors without destroying them.

Ars Technica

OpenAI’s Chief Futurist Is Leaving the Company

OpenAI's Chief Futurist Joshua Achiam is departing after nearly nine years of researching AI safety—a role that's presumably become more challenging as the company races toward AGI while simultaneously trying to prevent it from turning everyone into paperclips. His departure comes after a notable courtroom cameo in the Musk-Altman legal drama, because apparently even AI safety researchers can't escape Silicon Valley's soap opera tendencies.

Wired AI

The Download: your stake in OpenAI, and the Treasury’s AI warning

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Your family’s $300 stake in OpenAI Sam Altman’s proposal that Americans should share in the wealth created by AI is back in the spotlight, with reports that he is discussing giving…

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Local, CPU-Friendly, High-Quality TTS (Text-to-Speech) with Kokoro

Kokoro emerges as the scrappy underdog of text-to-speech, promising high-quality voice synthesis without melting your CPU or your wallet. Finally, you can have your computer read you bedtime stories without it sounding like a dying robot or requiring a mortgage for cloud credits.

Hacker News

Why the rise of open source AI isn’t hurting Anthropic … yet

Open source AI and frontier labs like Anthropic are apparently living in perfect harmony, like a tech industry version of The Lion King. Turns out they're just feeding different stages of the same hype cycle - open source cleans up the leftovers while the big labs chase the next shiny breakthrough.

TechCrunch

Of course viewers are giving up on Netflix shows

Netflix has mastered the art of making viewers fall in love with shows only to abandon them faster than a bad Tinder date. When even 'Beef' - a show about petty revenge that should be relatable to everyone - loses 70% of its audience, you know the attention span crisis is real.

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 created a skill that teaches Claude to draw Excalidraw diagrams, because nothing says 'practical AI application' like making robots create those boxes-and-arrows masterpieces that nobody ever updates. At least when Claude draws your system architecture, it won't lie about how it actually works.

Excalidraw Diagram Skill