The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 20°C ☁️ 💨 19 km/h (gusts 39) Good
105 km
Barrie 22°C ☁️ 💨 16 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 21°C ☁️ 💨 7 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 20°C ☁️ 💨 8 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 20°C ☀️ 💨 16 km/h Good
Toronto
☁️ 20°C
Overcast
H: 22° / L: 13° · Wind SSW 19 km/h (gusts 39) · Humidity 64%
Thu 🌧️ 22° / 15° 💧85%
Fri ⛈️ 22° / 13° 💧6%
Sat 🌦️ 21° / 13° 💧10%
Sun 🌦️ 21° / 12° 💧10%
Mon 🌤️ 21° / 10° 💧31%
Honey Harbour
☁️ 21°C
Overcast
H: 21° / L: 12° · Wind W 7 km/h (gusts 17) · Humidity 65%
Thu 🌧️ 18° / 15° 💧90%
Fri ☁️ 17° / 12° 💧5%
Sat ☁️ 17° / 11° 💧5%
Sun ☁️ 16° / 10° 💧14%
Mon ☁️ 16° / 10° 💧20%
Sudbury
☀️ 20°C
Clear
H: 21° / L: 10° · Wind S 16 km/h · Humidity 57%
Thu 🌧️ 17° / 12° 💧73%
Fri 🌦️ 21° / 11° 💧65%
Sat ☁️ 21° / 10° 💧29%
Sun ⛈️ 16° / 8° 💧44%
Mon ☁️ 22° / 8° 💧21%

🚨 Breaking News

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The Times reports on a U.S.-Iran deal featuring a 60-day ceasefire and nuclear talks, because apparently we're all pretending that 60 days is enough time to solve decades of geopolitical tension. Nothing says 'lasting peace' quite like putting it on a two-month trial period.

World

Today in Focus | The Guardian

The Guardian's podcast crew promises to bring you 'closer to journalism' through deep reporting and personal testimony, which sounds lovely except this description tells us absolutely nothing about what actually happened today. It's like getting a beautifully wrapped gift box that turns out to be empty.

World

🌍 World News

Iran sends tankers loaded with oil past US military blockade

Iran just played a high-stakes game of maritime chicken with the US Navy and apparently won, sending three oil tankers straight through an American blockade in the Gulf of Oman. Either this is some impressive diplomatic chess or someone's about to have a very awkward conversation in the Pentagon.

BBC World

Live Updates: U.S. Details Agreement With Iran as Trump Departs G7 Summit

Trump apparently squeezed in some last-minute dealmaking at the G7, with US officials revealing a preliminary agreement that promises Iran $300 billion for reconstruction plus two months of nuclear negotiations. Nothing says 'departure gift' quite like potentially reshaping Middle Eastern geopolitics on your way out the door.

NYT World

Al Jazeera journalist reunited with family in Khartoum after years of war

Al Jazeera journalist Al-Tahir al-Mardi finally made it home to Khartoum after three years of war-enforced family separation. In a world where 'breaking news' usually means something's literally broken, it's refreshing when the headline is about something being put back together.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

The faces of MAID

A decade after Canada legalized medical assistance in dying, families share intimate stories of loved ones' final choices, proving that the most profound policy debates ultimately come down to deeply personal human experiences that defy easy political categorization.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Mark Cuban has a blunt response to Coinbase CEO

Mark Cuban apparently had some choice words for Coinbase's CEO, though the details remain as elusive as Bitcoin's environmental benefits. Given Cuban's track record of verbal precision, I'm guessing it wasn't a gentle suggestion to diversify into index funds.

Yahoo Finance

It’s ‘unavoidable’: Apple says it will be forced to raise prices due to the AI boom

Apple's Tim Cook has discovered the shocking principle that when you need the same chips as everyone else building AI data centers, prices go up – and naturally, this revelation will be shared with consumers via higher iPhone prices. The company that charges $1,000 for a monitor stand is suddenly concerned about component costs, which is either refreshingly honest or impressively shameless.

MarketWatch

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Anthropic got hit by export rules nobody understands

Trump's export rules struck Anthropic like a bureaucratic meteor, forcing them to block everyone—including their own employees—from accessing their newest AI models because apparently nobody can figure out what 'foreign national' means anymore. Nothing says 'America First' like accidentally kneecapping your own AI companies with regulations written by people who probably still use Internet Explorer.

The Verge AI

Roelof Botha joins SpaceX’s board of directors

Former Sequoia bigwig Roelof Botha just landed a seat on SpaceX's board following their record-breaking IPO, filling what they diplomatically called an 'existing vacancy'—which in corporate speak usually means someone either quit in a huff or got the boot. At least now there's another seasoned VC around to watch Elon's Twitter habits with professional concern.

TechCrunch AI

Two-thirds of Americans think AI is advancing too quickly

Two-thirds of Americans think AI is moving too fast, yet nearly half are out here chatting with bots like digital therapy addicts—classic 'I'm worried about this thing I can't stop using' energy. ChatGPT usage has doubled since 2023, proving once again that humans are excellent at simultaneously fearing and embracing their potential robot overlords.

The Verge AI

Vibe-decoding the White House-Anthropic fight over Fable

Hello and welcome to Regulator, an email for Verge subscribers about technology, politics, and what happens when science crashes headlong into self-interest. Not a subscriber? Sign up here today! Got the scoop on a petty feud that's going to somehow fundamentally reshape the entire field of frontier AI development? Send 'em over to tina.nguyen+tips@theverge.com. Back […]

The Verge AI

NEA’s Tiffany Luck says enterprises are still figuring out their AI ROI

Tokenmaxxing was the hottest trend in Silicon Valley earlier this year, with CEOs encouraging employees to push AI usage as far as it would go. Then the bill came due. Uber reportedly blew through its annual AI budget in a few months, some companies cut Claude licenses for parts of their org, and Meta killed its internal leaderboard.  This tension between […]

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

The Ars Technica 2026 Reader Survey: Let your voice be heard!

Ars Technica wants to know how you consume their tech journalism and what stories make you click versus scroll past—because apparently even veteran tech publications need to crowdsource their editorial decisions now. It's basically a focus group disguised as reader engagement, but hey, at least they're asking nicely.

Ars Technica

Operating a Humanoid With Your Body Is a Hot Job in China’s Hardware Capital

Shenzhen workers are literally puppeteering humanoid robots through VR rigs, turning science fiction into the world's most surreal day job. It's like motion capture acting, except instead of making CGI dragons believable, you're making robots walk without falling over—which honestly might be harder.

Wired AI

The Download: a reality check for geoengineering and the science of interoception

MIT Technology Review serves up their daily tech digest featuring geoengineering reality checks and the science of feeling your own heartbeat. Because nothing says 'cutting-edge journalism' like bundling atmospheric manipulation schemes with navel-gazing about bodily awareness in one convenient newsletter.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)