The Drély Tribune

Evening Edition
Friday, July 10, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 24°C ☀️ 💨 7 km/h Good
105 km
Barrie 26°C ☀️ 💨 13 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 25°C ☀️ 💨 12 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 26°C ☁️ 💨 4 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 27°C ☀️ 💨 14 km/h Good
Toronto
☀️ 24°C
Clear
H: 25° / L: 19° · Wind ESE 7 km/h · Humidity 71%
Sat ☁️ 26° / 18°
Sun ☁️ 26° / 15°
Mon ☁️ 31° / 18° 💧1%
Tue ☁️ 34° / 23° 💧1%
Wed ☁️ 33° / 24° 💧5%
Honey Harbour
☀️ 25°C
Clear
H: 26° / L: 16° · Wind WNW 12 km/h · Humidity 75%
Sat 🌤️ 26° / 15°
Sun ☁️ 28° / 14°
Mon ☁️ 29° / 18° 💧6%
Tue ☁️ 31° / 21° 💧3%
Wed ☁️ 28° / 21° 💧3%
Sudbury
☀️ 27°C
Clear
H: 28° / L: 16° · Wind NNW 14 km/h · Humidity 34%
Sat ☁️ 27° / 14° 💧2%
Sun 🌦️ 29° / 16° 💧8%
Mon 🌦️ 34° / 14° 💧29%
Tue ☁️ 36° / 20° 💧3%
Wed ☁️ 28° / 16° 💧5%

🚨 Breaking News

US and Iran exchange intensifying fire across Mideast, threatening ceasefire deal

The US and Iran are playing their favorite game of 'escalating military tag' across the Middle East, with America dropping bombs and Tehran responding by lobbing missiles at Gulf neighbors. Apparently three weeks was the exact shelf life of that ceasefire deal—who could have predicted such shocking restraint wouldn't last?

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The New York Times is doing that thing where they bury the lede under seventeen layers of 'Today's Paper' metadata, but the gist is that surprise, surprise—both sides are pointing fingers over ceasefire violations like kids caught fighting in the backseat. Three weeks of peace was apparently too ambitious for the region's attention span.

World

Trump spoke with Netanyahu about US ‘moves’ in the Persian Gulf

Trump and Netanyahu had their regular Thursday chat about 'US moves' in the Persian Gulf, which sounds suspiciously like diplomatic speak for 'we're about to stir the pot.' They also discussed Turkey, presumably in that special tone reserved for the regional wild card nobody quite knows how to handle.

Breaking

🌍 World News

Wildfire in southern Spain leaves at least 12 dead and 23 missing

A wildfire near Los Gallardos in southern Spain has killed at least 12 people and left 23 missing, with four victims possibly being British tourists who probably didn't expect their Mediterranean getaway to turn quite this apocalyptic. Nothing says 'vacation from hell' quite like fleeing actual hellfire.

BBC World

Iran’s Supreme Leader Remains Absent, a Void at the Top of the Regime

Iran's Supreme Leader has gone conspicuously MIA, skipping even his father's funeral this week in a move that's either deeply concerning or the ultimate family drama power play. Nature abhors a vacuum, but Iranian politics seems to be making an exception while everyone nervously eyes the empty throne.

NYT World

Dozens of abducted schoolchildren and teachers rescued in Nigeria

Dozens of schoolchildren and teachers kidnapped from three schools in Nigeria's Oyo state back in May have finally been rescued, because apparently even basic education requires a rescue mission these days. One can only hope the kids' math skills improved during their unscheduled field trip to 'Advanced Survival 101.'

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

📈 Tech Stocks

Fed minutes expose deep divide over interest-rate outlook

The Fed's latest minutes reveal officials are about as unified on interest rates as a cat convention is on dog policy. Some want to cut rates while others prefer to keep choking the economy like a python with commitment issues, making Powell's job roughly as enviable as a weather forecaster during tornado season.

Yahoo Finance

Delta expects higher airfare to last, bringing 2026 profit goal in reach, CEO says

Delta's CEO cheerfully announces that expensive flights are here to stay, because apparently shareholders deserve champagne while passengers get peanuts and existential dread. The airline industry's first quarterly reporter seems confident that gouging travelers will help hit their 2026 profit targets—shocking absolutely no one who's bought a plane ticket lately.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Apple sues OpenAI for allegedly stealing hardware secrets

Apple is accusing OpenAI of running what sounds like a corporate espionage recruitment program, alleging former employees made off with trade secrets like they were loading up on free snacks from the break room. The lawsuit claims this wasn't just rogue employees going freelance with forbidden knowledge, but a coordinated effort blessed by OpenAI's senior leadership.

The Verge AI

Apple sues OpenAI over alleged trade secret theft

In what appears to be the same story as above but with slightly different details, Apple is doubling down on its claim that OpenAI's leadership actively encouraged former Apple employees to bring along some unofficial 'parting gifts' in the form of proprietary secrets. Nothing says 'innovative AI company' quite like allegedly needing to steal your homework from the cool kids' table.

TechCrunch AI

Open source AI matters more than ever, according to Hugging Face’s Clem Delangue

Hugging Face CEO Clem Delangue is evangelizing open source AI like it's the second coming, claiming companies inevitably see the light and abandon their proprietary models for the warm embrace of shared code. Meanwhile, half the Fortune 500 is apparently using his platform, which sounds less like altruistic open source ideology and more like solid business strategy disguised as philosophy.

TechCrunch AI

Would you host part of an AI data center in your home?

Sunrun wants to turn your home into a distributed AI data center node, because apparently what every household needs is to become an unpaid intern in someone else's compute farm. The company is betting people will welcome the gentle hum of AI processing in their living rooms in exchange for what's probably pocket change, turning the sharing economy into the 'your house is now a server rack' economy.

The Verge AI

🤖 AI General

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

Car enthusiasts are playing digital cat-and-mouse with manufacturers, hacking ECU chips to unleash more horsepower while automakers scramble to keep their electronic brains locked down. It's basically jailbreaking your iPhone, except your iPhone can hit 0-60 in under 4 seconds.

Ars Technica

Apple Is Suing OpenAI for Allegedly Stealing Hardware Secrets

Apple is dragging OpenAI to court, claiming the ChatGPT maker turned employee poaching into corporate espionage by encouraging defectors to smuggle out trade secrets like they're sneaking snacks from a movie theater. Nothing says 'artificial intelligence' quite like old-fashioned human greed and betrayal.

Wired AI

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

Anthropic cracked open Claude's digital skull and found something resembling actual thought processes—the AI equivalent of finally seeing what's behind the curtain in Oz. Meanwhile, OpenAI is apparently building a 'super app' because apparently one way to accidentally destroy humanity wasn't enough features for them.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

GPT-5.6, Grok 4.5, Claude, and Muse Spark build the same 4 apps

Four AI models walk into a bar and all order the same drink — turns out when you give different LLMs identical prompts, they build remarkably similar apps, which is either a testament to convergent problem-solving or a damning indictment of how predictably boring most app ideas really are. The Hacker News crowd is predictably fascinated by this digital equivalent of multiple people arriving at a party wearing the same outfit.

Hacker News

Bluesky’s interim CEO, Toni Schneider, drops the ‘interim’

Bluesky's interim CEO Toni Schneider has decided to drop the 'interim' from his title, presumably after realizing that running a Twitter alternative in 2024 requires the kind of long-term commitment usually reserved for cult membership. The former Automattic chief says he's 'all in' on the unconventional platform, which is either admirable dedication or a spectacular case of Stockholm syndrome with decentralized protocols.

TechCrunch

Apple sues OpenAI for allegedly stealing hardware secrets

Apple is suing OpenAI for allegedly pilfering hardware secrets through former employees, because apparently the age-old tradition of tech workers taking their knowledge to new companies has suddenly become scandalous when AI is involved. This lawsuit suggests Apple believes their trade secrets are so valuable that even OpenAI — a company that convinced the world to pay for chatbots — couldn't resist a little corporate espionage.

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 watch your AI assistant burn through tokens like a teenager with their parent's credit card. Now you can inspect every tool call and context window overflow in glorious visual detail, which is either very helpful or deeply depressing depending on your relationship with debugging.

claude-devtools

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

Vercel's WebReel lets you record scripted browser demos as video, which sounds suspiciously like automated content creation for the 'just watch this quick demo' crowd. Finally, a way to generate those smooth product walkthrough videos without having to do seventeen takes because you clicked the wrong button.

webreel