The Drély Tribune

Morning Edition
Monday, July 13, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 16°C ☀️ 💨 9 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 16°C ☀️ 💨 6 km/h (gusts 17) Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 17°C ☀️ 💨 9 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 17°C ☁️ 💨 8 km/h (gusts 21) Good
165 km
Sudbury 18°C ☁️ 💨 9 km/h (gusts 21) Good
Toronto
☀️ 16°C
Clear
H: 30° / L: 16° · Wind NNW 9 km/h · Humidity 69%
Tue ☁️ 38° / 21°
Wed ☁️ 33° / 25° 💧3%
Thu ☁️ 32° / 22° 💧2%
Fri ☁️ 27° / 18° 💧22%
Sat 🌦️ 20° / 16° 💧48%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 17°C
Clear
H: 28° / L: 17° · Wind SSW 9 km/h (gusts 16) · Humidity 79%
Tue ☁️ 29° / 20° 💧1%
Wed ☁️ 27° / 20° 💧1%
Thu ☁️ 24° / 19° 💧1%
Fri ☁️ 21° / 14° 💧36%
Sat 🌦️ 19° / 14° 💧49%
Sudbury
☁️ 18°C
Overcast
H: 33° / L: 18° · Wind SW 9 km/h (gusts 21) · Humidity 85%
Tue ☁️ 36° / 22° 💧11%
Wed ☁️ 30° / 17° 💧10%
Thu ☁️ 25° / 15° 💧2%
Fri ☁️ 23° / 10° 💧28%
Sat ☁️ 25° / 14° 💧40%

🚨 Breaking News

Weather: How hot will it be today?

Mother Nature apparently didn't get the memo about 'gradual climate change' and has decided to shatter June temperature records like they're made of glass. Pack your sunscreen and existential dread — it's going to be a scorcher that'll make you question why humans ever left air-conditioned caves.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times is serving up its usual helping of global chaos with a side of maritime drama, featuring Trump's mysterious Iranian waterway agreement that's aging about as well as milk in the desert. Apparently someone forgot to tell Iran that 'control' doesn't typically involve setting things on fire, but here we are.

World

The US launches more strikes on Iran as the standoff over the Strait of Hormuz escalates

The U.S. and Iran are playing the world's most expensive game of naval ping-pong in the Strait of Hormuz, with each side escalating faster than a Twitter argument. What started with a blazing container ship and missing crew member has now evolved into full military strikes — because apparently diplomatic phone calls are so last century.

Breaking

🌍 World News

At least 27 killed, 22 critically injured after fire engulfs Bangkok bar

A fire at a Bangkok bar in Chatuchak district turned into a deadly inferno, killing at least 27 people and critically injuring 22 others as patrons literally ran through flames to escape. Nothing says 'last call' quite like having to sprint through a wall of fire to reach the exit.

BBC World

Lebanese Hold Fast to Their Land Despite Threat of Long Israeli Occupation

Southern Lebanese residents are clinging to their homes despite entire towns being gutted by the Israel-Hezbollah conflict, choosing to endure bombardment rather than risk never being allowed back. It's a grim calculus: stay and possibly die, or leave and definitely lose everything.

NYT World

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Torontonians describe chaos, heartbreak after fatal shooting at St. Clair festival

A Toronto street festival turned into a crime scene when gunfire erupted, leaving the community to process both the immediate tragedy and the bitter irony that a celebration became a catastrophe. Because apparently even summer festivals aren't safe spaces anymore, which is exactly what everyone needed to worry about.

CBC Canada

Ontario runs $8M tab storing U.S. alcohol, as province's plans for stockpile still uncertain

Ontario's government is sitting on a $79 million stockpile of American booze like some kind of alcoholic doomsday prepper, racking up $8 million in storage costs while $2.6 million worth goes bad. Nothing says fiscal responsibility quite like letting taxpayer-funded liquor expire in warehouses while refusing to explain why you're hoarding it in the first place.

CBC Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

Mark Cuban has strong words on AI companies and job losses

Mark Cuban apparently has opinions about AI and employment, though the details are as absent as a description in this headline. Given Cuban's track record of hot takes, I'm sure it involves either revolutionary disruption or catastrophic doom—probably delivered with the confidence of someone who's never had to update their own LinkedIn profile.

Yahoo Finance

Oil prices surge as much as 5% after Iran declares Strait of Hormuz is closed

Iran has decided to play geopolitical chicken with global oil supplies by allegedly closing the Strait of Hormuz, sending crude prices up 5% faster than your gas station can update their signs. Nothing says 'Monday morning' quite like the prospect of $6 gasoline because two countries can't agree on who gets to blow up whose stuff.

MarketWatch

A tiny GLP-1 implant is the latest bet to help patients maintain their weight loss

Vivani Medical thinks the solution to maintaining Ozempic weight loss is shoving a tiny implant under your skin, because apparently weekly injections weren't quite commitment enough. It's like a nicotine patch, but for your relationship with food—and presumably just as easy to forget you have until someone asks about that weird bump.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Waze is getting a bunch of new AI-powered features

Waze is getting a Gemini-powered glow-up because apparently we needed AI to make sitting in traffic even more personalized. Google's cramming its flagship assistant into the navigation app, though they're being mysteriously coy about what exactly two of the four new features actually do.

The Verge AI

OpenAI bets on families as ChatGPT goes deeper into households

OpenAI is now hiring someone to figure out how to get ChatGPT deeper into family life, because nothing says 'quality time with grandma' like having an AI mediator at dinner. They're specifically targeting families, caregivers, and older adults—presumably the demographics most likely to ask the chatbot to explain what all those young people are saying on the TikToks.

TechCrunch AI

Lorde says Ray-Ban Meta AI glasses are ‘not sexy’

Lorde took time during her Madrid festival set to drag AI glasses as 'not sexy,' which is particularly awkward since Ray-Ban sponsored the event. Nothing quite like biting the hand that feeds you while simultaneously delivering the most devastating tech review of 2024.

The Verge AI

Meta removes controversial AI feature on Instagram after backlash

Meta quietly yanked a controversial AI feature from Instagram after users collectively told them it 'missed the mark'—corporate speak for 'this was a terrible idea and everyone hated it.' The company's blog post reads like a masterclass in damage control, complete with the classic 'we were just trying to help' defense.

TechCrunch AI

Apple’s failed self-driving car program left a legacy of powerful AI chips

Apple's abandoned self-driving car project turns out to be the accidental hero origin story for their current AI chip dominance. The company realized early on they'd need serious on-device processing power for autonomous vehicles, and while the car never materialized, those chip innovations are now powering their AI ambitions.

The Verge AI

Apple sues OpenAI over alleged trade secret theft

Apple is suing OpenAI for allegedly stealing trade secrets, with claims that the misconduct was orchestrated by OpenAI's senior leadership including a former Apple employee. It's giving major 'ex took the Netflix password and all the good streaming recommendations' energy, but with billion-dollar corporate implications.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Like a cheat code for your car: We investigate ECU tuning

Car manufacturers and tuners are locked in an eternal game of digital cat-and-mouse, where one side builds increasingly sophisticated locks and the other treats them as expensive puzzles. It's basically jailbreaking, but for horsepower enthusiasts who think their $80,000 truck needs just a little more oomph.

Ars Technica

Scientists’ Side Hustle? Using AI and Quantum Computing to Generate New Peptides

Enterprising scientists are moonlighting with quantum computers to design new peptides for rare diseases, proving that even Nobel laureates need side hustles these days. They're essentially using the universe's most expensive calculator to help people Big Pharma forgot about—which is both heartwarming and a damning indictment of our healthcare priorities.

Wired AI

The Download: Claude’s inner workings and OpenAI’s “super app”

Anthropic claims they've found Claude's 'thinking room' where it processes concepts, giving us a rare peek behind the AI curtain that usually feels more like a Magic 8-Ball than actual intelligence. Meanwhile, OpenAI continues its quest to become the WeChat of everything, because apparently one tech overlord wasn't enough.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Zig Creator Calls Spade a Spade, Anthropic Blows Smoke

The Zig programming language creator apparently decided to skip the diplomatic niceties and deliver some unvarnished tech industry truth, while Anthropic presumably responded with their finest corporate word salad. 143 Hacker News points suggests the internet appreciates when someone finally says what everyone's thinking.

Hacker News

TechCrunch Mobility: A robotaxi ultimatum

TechCrunch's mobility newsletter serves up a robotaxi ultimatum, because apparently we've reached the 'put up or shut up' phase of autonomous vehicle promises. After years of 'just five more years' predictions, someone's finally drawing a line in the digital sand.

TechCrunch

This free Mac app reveals the truth about your mystery USB-C cables

A free Mac app now does what an $8 gadget used to do before it vanished into the electronics graveyard—tell you which of your identical-looking USB-C cables are secretly useless. Because apparently we needed Apple Silicon's computational power to solve the mystery of why your phone charges like it's running on hamster wheels.

The Verge

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)