The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Monday, June 22, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 16°C 🌤️ 💨 15 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 22°C ☀️ 💨 14 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 20°C ☀️ 💨 13 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 21°C ☀️ 💨 12 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 20°C ⛅ 💨 11 km/h Good
Toronto
🌤️ 16°C
Mostly Clear
H: 17° / L: 14° · Wind ENE 15 km/h (gusts 21) · Humidity 95%
Tue 🌫️ 24° / 10°
Wed ☁️ 22° / 14° 💧4%
Thu ⛈️ 18° / 15° 💧68%
Fri ☁️ 22° / 15° 💧18%
Sat ☁️ 23° / 16° 💧11%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 20°C
Clear
H: 21° / L: 10° · Wind WNW 13 km/h · Humidity 60%
Tue 🌦️ 21° / 11° 💧5%
Wed ☁️ 20° / 12° 💧4%
Thu 🌦️ 21° / 14° 💧75%
Fri ☁️ 22° / 12° 💧32%
Sat ☁️ 22° / 13° 💧21%
Sudbury
20°C
Partly Cloudy
H: 23° / L: 10° · Wind N 11 km/h · Humidity 68%
Tue ☁️ 22° / 11° 💧3%
Wed 🌦️ 22° / 11° 💧12%
Thu 🌦️ 19° / 11° 💧68%
Fri 🌦️ 23° / 11° 💧32%
Sat ☁️ 26° / 13° 💧28%

🚨 Breaking News

Live updates: Vance says Iran will allow nuclear inspections, Tehran hasn’t commented

Vance claims Iran will submit to nuclear inspections while Tehran maintains radio silence, which is either diplomatic progress or someone getting way ahead of their skis. Senior negotiators spent Monday having what they generously call 'initial talks' about ending the U.S.-Iran standoff—presumably over something stronger than hotel coffee.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times offers today's paper featuring analysts who helpfully point out that neither war nor peace actually solved the Iran problem. It's the journalistic equivalent of noting that umbrellas don't stop hurricanes, but with more gravitas and fewer weather maps.

World

🌍 World News

Vance says Iran will allow nuclear inspectors back into the country

Vance claims Iran is rolling out the red carpet for nuclear inspectors again, because nothing says 'we're totally not building nukes' like suddenly becoming cooperative after years of diplomatic cold shoulder. Apparently the first round of talks went so swimmingly that Tehran remembered they actually like international oversight—what are the odds?

BBC World

Keir Starmer Resigns as UK Prime Minister

Starmer's political obituary is being written as he prepares his exit from Downing Street, making way for Andy Burnham to become the UK's lucky number seven PM this decade. At this rate, British prime ministers are changing faster than a Netflix password, and Burnham gets to inherit whatever's left of the country after this revolving door of leadership.

NYT World

Hungary’s PM launches drive to free country from Orban’s ‘mafia’

Hungary's PM has suddenly discovered a passion for anti-corruption crusades and constitutional reform, which is either the plot twist of the century or someone's having a very public midlife crisis. Nothing says 'cleaning house' quite like proposing to oust your own president while launching a drive against what sounds suspiciously like your own political ecosystem.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

Fast-food seafood chain closed over 900 stores, mounts comeback

A fast-food seafood chain that somehow thought closing 900 stores was part of a successful business strategy is now attempting what they're calling a 'comeback.' Because nothing says 'we've got this figured out' quite like shuttering nearly your entire operation and then asking customers to trust you with their fish again.

Yahoo Finance

🎨 AI for Content Creators

AI is cursing renters with the promise of impossible homes

Poor Joyce thought she found her Manhattan dream studio, only to discover it was AI-generated bait that doesn't actually exist. Because apparently even our housing fantasies need to be disrupted by algorithms that promise impossible spaces at reasonable prices.

The Verge AI

The AI world is getting ‘loopy’

AI agents are now running in continuous 'loops,' working endlessly in the background like digital hamsters on wheels. It's agentic AI taken to its logical extreme: why have one AI making questionable decisions when you can have a whole swarm doing it 24/7?

TechCrunch AI

Read this before you vibe-code another app

Developer Bob Starr 'vibe-coded' a website called Boomberg without bothering with security, leaving it vulnerable to SQL injection for months. Turns out coding by vibes alone doesn't magically protect you from hackers who actually know what they're doing.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

This former hacker saw the light—and now wants to collect all of it

A reformed hacker has traded breaking into systems for breaking into the mysteries of light itself, apparently deciding that collecting photons is more noble than collecting passwords. Nothing says 'I've found my purpose' quite like pivoting from digital infiltration to what sounds like the world's most ambitious Instagram filter project.

Ars Technica

Meta Pauses Employee-Tracking Program Following Internal Data Leak

Meta has hit pause on tracking its own employees after accidentally leaving their surveillance data lying around like company secrets at a coffee shop. The irony of a privacy-focused company failing to keep its own employee monitoring program private is so thick you could cut it with a leaked spreadsheet.

Wired AI

Three things to watch amid Anthropic’s latest feud with the government

Anthropic and the US government are having another lovers' spat over AI regulations, with their model called 'Mythos' serving as the latest relationship drama catalyst. At this point, watching AI companies and regulators fight is becoming more predictable than a sitcom rerun, just with higher stakes and more acronyms.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Steam Machine launches today

Valve's Steam Machine finally materialized today with all the fanfare of a delayed train — 921 Hacker News points suggest the tech crowd is either nostalgic or masochistic. At $1,049 for the base model (controllers sold separately, naturally), it's less 'console killer' and more 'wallet assassin.'

Hacker News

The AI world is getting ‘loopy’

The AI world has discovered the concept of endless loops, because apparently what we needed was artificial intelligence that never stops working in the background. This 'agentic swarm' approach sounds suspiciously like giving your overeager intern the ability to clone themselves indefinitely.

TechCrunch

Valve describes just how brutal RAM negotiations are in 2026

Valve learned the hard way that RAM manufacturers in 2026 have apparently formed their own OPEC, driving Steam Machine prices into luxury laptop territory. The company's refusal to subsidize hardware means consumers get the full, unvarnished reality of what happens when memory chips cost more than your firstborn.

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 decided Claude needed artistic skills, so they built a tool that lets AI agents generate Excalidraw diagrams instead of just spitting out text. Now your coding assistant can visualize your terrible architecture decisions in beautiful, minimalist drawings. Because apparently we needed our AI to be both smarter AND more creative than us.

Excalidraw Diagram Skill

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, proper DevTools for Claude Code that lets you peek under the hood at session logs, token usage, and context windows like a proper debugger. It's the missing piece for anyone who's ever wondered why their AI assistant suddenly started hallucinating about quantum physics mid-conversation. Free and open source, because apparently someone believes in transparent AI debugging.

claude-devtools

GitHub - vercel-labs/webreel: Record scripted browser demos as video · GitHub

Vercel's WebReel lets you record scripted browser demos as videos, perfect for those who want their documentation to move beyond static screenshots. It's automation for the automation-obsessed, turning your browser interactions into shareable video content. Because apparently typing 'click here, then here' wasn't sufficiently engaging anymore.

webreel