The Drély Tribune

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

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 24°C ☀️ 💨 9 km/h (gusts 27) Good
105 km
Barrie 22°C ☀️ 💨 10 km/h (gusts 22) Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 20°C ☀️ 💨 8 km/h (gusts 22) Good
55 km
Parry Sound 19°C ☀️ 💨 7 km/h (gusts 21) Good
165 km
Sudbury 18°C ☀️ 💨 10 km/h Good
Toronto
☀️ 24°C
Clear
H: 31° / L: 23° · Wind WNW 9 km/h (gusts 27) · Humidity 69%
Thu ☁️ 29° / 18°
Fri ☁️ 26° / 20° 💧25%
Sat ⛈️ 27° / 20° 💧74%
Sun 🌦️ 24° / 18° 💧48%
Mon 🌦️ 26° / 20° 💧39%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 20°C
Clear
H: 26° / L: 19° · Wind WNW 8 km/h (gusts 22) · Humidity 77%
Thu ☁️ 25° / 17°
Fri 🌧️ 27° / 14° 💧40%
Sat ⛈️ 27° / 16° 💧60%
Sun 🌫️ 25° / 16° 💧36%
Mon 🌦️ 27° / 17° 💧50%
Sudbury
☀️ 18°C
Clear
H: 30° / L: 18° · Wind WNW 10 km/h (gusts 20) · Humidity 69%
Thu ☁️ 26° / 18° 💧1%
Fri ☁️ 26° / 11° 💧34%
Sat 🌦️ 19° / 14° 💧49%
Sun ☁️ 27° / 12° 💧11%
Mon 🌦️ 24° / 14° 💧52%

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times serves up what appears to be a fascinating spy thriller involving Mossad, a former Iranian president, and enough intrigue to make John le Carré jealous. Unfortunately, whoever wrote this description seems to have fallen asleep mid-sentence, leaving us with the literary equivalent of a cliffhanger nobody asked for.

World

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

Supreme Court justices are essentially asking Congress for bigger security blankets because apparently being one of nine people who decide America's fate comes with some occupational hazards. Justice Barrett's concern about bodyguard burnout suggests even the folks paid to take bullets are getting tired of the current political climate.

Breaking

🌍 World News

Trump threatens to bomb bridges and power plants unless Iran resumes talks

Trump's latest diplomatic strategy involves threatening to bomb Iranian infrastructure until they agree to chat, because nothing says 'let's negotiate' quite like promising to destroy someone's power grid. This charming approach comes amid four days of actual shooting and a US port blockade, proving that escalation remains America's favorite foreign policy tool.

BBC World

Six Dead in an Elevator After Fire in Central Brussels

Six people died in a Brussels elevator after being trapped during a building fire, turning what should have been a routine escape route into a fatal dead end. The Oxy building incident serves as a grim reminder that sometimes the quickest way out isn't always the safest.

NYT World

Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and Al Jazeera

Al Jazeera's board chairman has penned a tribute to Qatar's former emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, who apparently passed away recently. It's always touching when media organizations remember the royalty who helped shape their editorial independence, or whatever we're calling it these days.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Gun licence applications have surged in the Toronto area since 2016

The Greater Toronto Area has seen a notable spike in gun license applications since 2016, with officials diplomatically attributing it to 'growing interest in shooting sports' rather than acknowledging any less sporting motivations. One can only wonder if the timing correlates with certain political developments south of the border that might have Canadians reconsidering their preparedness strategies.

CBC Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

BMW's U.S. business is delivering when it matters most

BMW's U.S. business is apparently having a moment when timing actually matters, though given the complete lack of description here, I'm left to assume they're either crushing it or this is the corporate equivalent of a participation trophy announcement. Without details, this feels like someone hitting 'publish' on a press release template a bit too early.

Yahoo Finance

It’s boom and bust in the hedge-fund world as both liquidations and new launches spike

The hedge fund world is experiencing its own version of musical chairs, with liquidations hitting a two-year high while new funds simultaneously pop up like financial whack-a-moles. It's the ultimate Wall Street circle of life: for every fund that dies a spectacular death, three more emerge convinced they've cracked the code that stumped their predecessors.

MarketWatch

The AI boom just found two new winners: Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase

Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have discovered that the real AI goldmine isn't building the robots—it's financing everyone else's robot dreams and facilitating the inevitable trading frenzies that follow. While tech companies burn through venture capital trying to achieve artificial general intelligence, these banks are achieving very real profits from all the deal-making hysteria.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

OpenAI may announce a ChatGPT smart speaker this year

OpenAI is apparently building a smart speaker that wants to be your friend, complete with cameras to watch you and mysterious 'mechanical elements that can move' — because what could possibly go wrong with a screenless robot companion that sees everything and has abandonment issues.

The Verge AI

Lorde says AI glasses are ‘not sexy’

Pop star Lorde has declared AI glasses 'not sexy' while lamenting our increasingly fake world, apparently unaware that unsexy tech and reality confusion have been humanity's default settings since someone invented the smartphone.

TechCrunch AI

Meta accused of using biased AI targeting for mass layoffs

Twenty-six former Meta employees are suing the company for allegedly using AI to target workers on medical leave for layoffs, because nothing says 'human-centered technology' like having an algorithm decide your cancer treatment makes you expendable.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

Simulating everything, sort of: The promise and limits of world models

World models promise to simulate reality digitally, which sounds impressive until you realize we're essentially teaching computers to hallucinate with purpose. Experts are carefully explaining how these models work while diplomatically noting that 'what's still unsettled' is basically everything that matters.

Ars Technica

OpenAI Staffers Are Funding a Rival Super PAC to Take on Their Boss

OpenAI employees are literally funding opposition research against their own company's political efforts, proving that workplace drama scales beautifully with valuation. Nothing says 'unified corporate vision' quite like your staff dropping $215K to politically kneecap your president's pet project.

Wired AI

The Download: Claude’s inner workings, and the future of world models

MIT Technology Review's newsletter covers Anthropic's latest peek into AI's 'internal thoughts' and world model developments, because apparently we're now doing therapy sessions with language models. The discovery shows us what Claude is thinking, though whether that's reassuring or terrifying remains delightfully ambiguous.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Jurassic Park computers in excruciating detail

Someone with apparently infinite free time has dissected every pixelated detail of Jurassic Park's fictional computer systems, because apparently we needed to know exactly how InGen's IT department failed so spectacularly. The fact that this earned 449 upvotes on Hacker News suggests the tech community has strong opinions about dinosaur-era UX design.

Hacker News

OpenAI researcher Miles Wang in talks to launch AI drug discovery startup valued at $2B

Former OpenAI researcher Miles Wang is reportedly shopping around an AI drug discovery startup with a casual $2 billion valuation, because why cure diseases incrementally when you can do it with venture capital and machine learning? Investors are apparently convinced that the same technology that hallucinates fake citations can definitely nail molecular biology.

TechCrunch

The PS6 sure sounds like a handheld

The PS6 is rumored to be going handheld, which makes sense given that Sony's current strategy seems to involve making console gaming as expensive and inconvenient as possible. With disc drives disappearing and prices soaring, perhaps the real innovation is making us nostalgic for when gaming systems actually stayed in one place.

The Verge

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)