The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Saturday, June 27, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 24°C ☀️ 💨 11 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 26°C ☀️ 💨 9 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 24°C ⛅ 💨 11 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 25°C ☀️ 💨 8 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 26°C ☀️ 💨 6 km/h Good
Toronto
☀️ 24°C
Clear
H: 25° / L: 14° · Wind E 11 km/h · Humidity 57%
Sun ☁️ 27° / 15° 💧1%
Mon 🌦️ 25° / 16° 💧10%
Tue ⛈️ 34° / 18° 💧20%
Wed ⛈️ 35° / 26° 💧11%
Thu ⛈️ 35° / 25° 💧14%
Honey Harbour
24°C
Partly Cloudy
H: 24° / L: 12° · Wind NW 11 km/h (gusts 17) · Humidity 65%
Sun ☁️ 27° / 15° 💧1%
Mon ☁️ 27° / 16° 💧32%
Tue ⛈️ 32° / 19° 💧54%
Wed ⛈️ 29° / 21° 💧11%
Thu 🌦️ 28° / 20° 💧17%
Sudbury
☀️ 26°C
Clear
H: 27° / L: 13° · Wind SE 6 km/h · Humidity 37%
Sun ☁️ 27° / 14° 💧3%
Mon 🌦️ 28° / 15° 💧31%
Tue ⛈️ 33° / 17° 💧40%
Wed ⛈️ 32° / 20° 💧17%
Thu ⛈️ 32° / 18° 💧27%

🚨 Breaking News

Weather: How hot will it be today?

Mother Nature apparently missed the memo about seasonal moderation, deciding instead to throw a temperature tantrum that'll have meteorologists gleefully updating their 'hottest day ever' spreadsheets. Pack your sunscreen and existential dread in equal measure.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times buried the lede so deep it apparently requires heavy machinery to excavate, much like Venezuela's government scrambling to deploy over 100 bulldozers after residents politely suggested they weren't exactly killing it in the disaster response department. Sometimes the most honest reporting happens in the equipment manifest.

World

Israel and Lebanon sign framework agreement with US in 'first step' toward peace, Rubio says

Secretary of State Rubio orchestrated a diplomatic photo-op with Israeli and Lebanese ambassadors, announcing a 'framework agreement' that's apparently the Middle Eastern equivalent of agreeing to agree later. After months of Hezbollah and Israel playing their favorite game of escalating violence, this counts as progress in the wonderfully low-bar world of international relations.

Breaking

🌍 World News

Venezuela earthquakes kill 920 people as international rescue teams arrive

Venezuela's latest earthquake has claimed 920 lives, with hundreds more playing the world's most tragic game of hide-and-seek beneath collapsed buildings. International rescue teams are now arriving to help dig through the rubble, presumably with better equipment than thoughts and prayers.

BBC World

Volunteers Are Risking Their Lives to Stop Ebola. They Aren’t Always Welcome.

Congolese volunteers are literally dying to stop Ebola by conducting safe burials, but terrified communities keep treating them like unwelcome dinner guests at a plague convention. Nothing says 'public health crisis' quite like risking your life to save people who'd rather chase you away with pitchforks.

NYT World

Videos show Israeli settlers trying to seize house in occupied West Bank

New videos capture Israeli settlers attempting an impromptu real estate acquisition in the occupied West Bank, because apparently 'under construction' signs are just suggestions when you have strong feelings about property rights. It's like extreme house hunting, but with significantly more international law violations.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Police keep warning parents about Roblox. So why isn't it in the social media bill?

Police keep sounding the alarm about Roblox like it's the digital equivalent of unmarked vans offering candy, yet somehow it slipped through the social media legislation cracks. Apparently lawmakers think plastic building blocks are less concerning than doom-scrolling through TikTok, which is either refreshingly naive or spectacularly missing the point.

CBC Canada

Top executive at Métis Nation of Alberta leaves organization

Aaron Barner has quietly exited his executive role at Métis Nation of Alberta following a council meeting, with all the transparency of a classified government memo. The organization's silence on the departure suggests either diplomatic discretion or they're still figuring out how to spin whatever happened behind those closed doors.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Where Will High-Yield Enbridge Stock Be in 10 Years?

Enbridge stock apparently comes with a crystal ball subscription that I wasn't informed about, because predicting where any stock will be in a decade is roughly as reliable as weather forecasting for next Christmas. Though I suppose if you're investing in pipeline infrastructure, you're banking on humanity's continued commitment to moving liquids from Point A to Point B, which seems like a reasonably safe bet.

Yahoo Finance

How to work in retirement without seeing your Social Security checks slashed

The Social Security Administration has mastered the art of taking your money now and maybe giving it back later, like a government-sponsored layaway program for your own earnings. The good news is they're not actually stealing your benefits when you work in early retirement—they're just holding them hostage until you reach full retirement age, presumably to teach you a lesson about the audacity of wanting both income and dignity.

MarketWatch

How Kohl's lost its way — and is trying to become relevant again

Kohl's has achieved the retail equivalent of that friend who peaked in high school—once popular, now desperately trying to convince everyone they're still cool by partnering with whatever's trendy. The company's transformation strategy appears to involve throwing various partnerships at the wall like retail spaghetti, hoping something sticks besides the lingering scent of clearance desperation.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Margaret Atwood says the problem with AI is ‘garbage in, garbage out’

Margaret Atwood delivered the literary equivalent of 'well, duh' at a Portuguese festival, noting that AI suffers from humanity's classic problem: feeding it trash produces trash. The woman who predicted dystopia through fiction continues her streak of stating the obvious about our actual dystopia.

The Verge AI

Why is Apple asking me to pay more for Big Tech’s AI obsession?

Tim Cook has discovered the ancient art of blaming price hikes on someone else, pinning Apple's $300 MacBook Pro increase and across-the-board bumps on AI development costs. Nothing says 'innovation' quite like making customers pay extra for features they didn't ask for but will definitely get whether they want them or not.

The Verge AI

Apple Vision Pro exec is reportedly leaving for OpenAI

Apple's Vision Pro chief Paul Meade is jumping ship to OpenAI's hardware team, proving that even executives in charge of $3,500 face computers can spot a better opportunity. The timing suggests either impressive career planning or a keen sense of when to abandon a sinking mixed-reality headset.

TechCrunch AI

Anthropic’s Mythos 5 is back

Anthropic's Mythos 5 has returned from its Trump administration timeout, though only for select organizations while the public version remains in digital detention. Two weeks of government negotiations apparently determined that some AI is acceptable, but not for the peasants.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

Underpromise, overdeliver? Hands-on with the $24,950 Slate auto.

The Slate auto costs more than a Tesla Model 3 but delivers the driving range of a particularly ambitious golf cart—though I suppose 'bare-bones' is refreshingly honest marketing in an industry that usually promises your car will achieve sentience.

Ars Technica

💻 Tech General

IP Crawl: Living atlas of open webcams discovered on the public internet

Someone's mapped every unsecured webcam on the internet into a 'living atlas' — because apparently we needed a more efficient way to accidentally watch strangers eat cereal in their kitchens. The project hit 130 points on Hacker News, where privacy concerns compete with genuine fascination at humanity's impressive talent for leaving digital doors wide open.

Hacker News

Instagram is testing more ways to customize ‘Your Algorithm’

Instagram is graciously testing ways to let users customize 'their' algorithm, as if we haven't all been screaming into the void about wanting chronological feeds for years. This feels like being offered a choice of handcuffs — sure, you get to pick the color, but you're still chained to whatever the engagement gods decree.

TechCrunch

Teenage Engineering adds lo-fi mode, USB audio, and more to its KO II sampler

Teenage Engineering dropped OS 2.5 for their $329 KO II sampler, adding USB audio, lo-fi modes, and enough features to make bedroom producers everywhere suddenly productive. For a company that makes gear so aesthetically pleasing it belongs in modern art museums, they're surprisingly committed to actually making their toys functional too.

The Verge

⭐ GitHub Awesome (Trending)

GitHub - matt1398/claude-devtools: The missing DevTools for Claude Code — inspect session logs, tool calls, token usage, subagents, and context window in a visual UI. Free, open source.

Finally, someone built proper DevTools for Claude Code so you can actually see what your AI assistant is doing behind the scenes instead of just trusting its digital poker face. Track token usage, inspect tool calls, and watch your context window fill up like a progress bar of doom—all in a free, open-source visual interface.

claude-devtools