The Drély Tribune

Morning Edition
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
"All the news that's fit to panda."

🌤️ Weather

🛣️ Hwy 400/69 Corridor 390 km · Toronto → Sudbury
Toronto 22°C 🌫️ 💨 5 km/h 👁 0 km Poor
105 km
Barrie 23°C ☀️ 💨 2 km/h Good
65 km
Honey Harbour 23°C ☁️ 💨 5 km/h Good
55 km
Parry Sound 23°C ⛅ 💨 8 km/h Good
165 km
Sudbury 21°C ☀️ 💨 13 km/h (gusts 27) Good
Toronto
🌫️ 22°C
Fog
H: 35° / L: 21° · Wind WSW 5 km/h · Humidity 99%
Thu ⛈️ 36° / 20° 💧34%
Fri ⛈️ 34° / 22° 💧38%
Sat 🌦️ 30° / 23° 💧46%
Sun 🌦️ 24° / 21° 💧27%
Mon ☁️ 26° / 20° 💧20%
Honey Harbour
☁️ 23°C
Overcast
H: 30° / L: 23° · Wind SE 5 km/h · Humidity 92%
Thu ☁️ 28° / 22° 💧17%
Fri 🌦️ 28° / 18° 💧23%
Sat 🌦️ 24° / 17° 💧32%
Sun ☁️ 26° / 17° 💧32%
Mon ☁️ 28° / 17° 💧29%
Sudbury
☀️ 21°C
Clear
H: 33° / L: 21° · Wind SW 13 km/h (gusts 27) · Humidity 92%
Thu ☁️ 29° / 21° 💧25%
Fri 🌦️ 32° / 17° 💧25%
Sat 🌦️ 26° / 15° 💧28%
Sun ☁️ 28° / 14° 💧24%
Mon ☁️ 31° / 17° 💧21%

🚨 Breaking News

Weather: How hot will it be today?

Mother Nature apparently didn't get the memo about June being a reasonable month, as she's cranking up the heat dial to 'surface of Mercury' levels again. Another day, another temperature record falling faster than my faith in seasonal predictability.

Breaking

Today's Paper - The New York Times

The Supreme Court played constitutional referee today, telling Trump he can fire some people but not Fed officials—because apparently even the highest court recognizes that monetary policy requires slightly more job security than a reality TV show. The Times managed to bury this revelation under enough advertisement disclaimers to make a pharmaceutical commercial blush.

World

Live updates: Supreme Court rejects Trump’s push to toss $5 million verdict in E. Jean Carroll case

Trump's legal team discovered that even the Supreme Court won't help him escape a $5 million bill for defaming E. Jean Carroll, proving that some debts follow you no matter how high your appeals go. Meanwhile, his Middle East envoys are in Qatar trying to untangle Iranian relations, because nothing says 'diplomatic finesse' like sending your son-in-law to negotiate geopolitical crises.

Breaking

🌍 World News

Trump made more than $1bn from crypto in first year back in office

Trump's crypto portfolio apparently decided to make America's wallet great again, raking in over $1 billion and leaving his real estate ventures and novelty watch empire looking like chump change. Nothing says 'man of the people' quite like accidentally becoming a crypto billionaire while tweeting about the good old days.

BBC World

How War Takes Its Toll on Ukraine’s Pregnant Women

Ukrainian women are facing the ultimate multitasking challenge: growing humans while dodging bombs, blackouts, and constant displacement. Their resilience puts every 'difficult pregnancy' story to shame, proving that hope literally grows even in the darkest circumstances.

NYT World

In Pictures: Mexico celebrates historic World Cup victory

Mexico's streets erupted in celebration after their World Cup knockout victory, with fireworks painting the sky and fans daring to dream bigger than just 'maybe we won't embarrass ourselves this time.' The party was so intense you could probably see it from the International Space Station.

Al Jazeera

🇨🇦 Canada / Toronto

Cartoon villains with foreign accents drive language bias, Canadian study finds

Canadian researchers have discovered that cartoon villains with foreign accents are basically creating tiny xenophobes one Saturday morning at a time. Apparently, when kids watch Jafar scheming in his suspiciously Middle Eastern drawl, they're not just learning that parrots make terrible sidekicks—they're absorbing some delightfully problematic language biases too.

CBC Canada

What's open, closed and what to do in Toronto on Canada Day

Toronto is rolling out the standard Canada Day festivities on Wednesday, complete with fireworks and the annual tradition of pretending 35°C heat is totally normal while clutching miniature flags. The city's helpfully providing both outdoor activities for the masochists and indoor options for those who prefer their patriotism air-conditioned.

CBC Toronto

Heritage Minister wrong to criticize Palestinian exhibit, says NDP Leader Lewis

NDP Leader Lewis is telling Heritage Minister Marc Miller to back off after he demanded the Canadian Museum for Human Rights reword a Palestinian displacement exhibit. Nothing says 'human rights' quite like a government official trying to edit museum displays, but hey, at least someone's paying attention to what's actually in our cultural institutions for once.

Globe and Mail

📈 Tech Stocks

Lamborghini reveals new Urus performance hybrid SUV after ditching EVs

Lamborghini has unveiled the Urus SE Performante, dubbing it the 'fastest Super SUV in the world' after quietly abandoning their EV dreams. Because apparently nothing says environmental responsibility like a hybrid that can still burn rubber faster than most sports cars.

CNBC Tech

🎨 AI for Content Creators

Anthropic’s long-sidelined Fable 5 is greenlit to return

Anthropic finally convinced the Trump administration to let Claude Fable 5 out of digital detention, with global access resuming Wednesday across all major cloud platforms. Nothing says 'cutting-edge AI policy' quite like weeks of negotiations to restore a service that was apparently fine until someone decided it wasn't.

The Verge AI

The ‘Father of the Internet’ is finally retiring

Vinton Cerf, the man who helped build the internet we all love to complain about, is hanging up his 'chief internet evangelist' hat at Google next week. After decades of watching his creation become a cesspool of misinformation and cat videos, retirement seems like perfect timing.

TechCrunch AI

Google’s NotebookLM can sum up your research in a TikTok-style clip

Google's NotebookLM now converts your research into TikTok-style videos because apparently even academic work needs to be bite-sized and vertically formatted now. The feature launches for AI Ultra and Pro subscribers who clearly have $20/month to spend on making their study notes more danceable.

The Verge AI

Trump drops restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable models

Trump's administration lifted restrictions on Anthropic's AI models while simultaneously leaving the entire industry clueless about future regulations. It's the policy equivalent of playing regulatory roulette with billion-dollar AI systems—what could possibly go wrong?

TechCrunch AI

Netflix is using an AI-generated Gene Wilder voice in its Willy Wonka reality show

Netflix is using AI to resurrect Gene Wilder's voice for their Willy Wonka reality show, because nothing honors a beloved actor's legacy quite like digital necromancy for content mill purposes. The show premieres September 23rd, continuing Netflix's disturbing trend of turning fictional nightmares into actual human suffering for entertainment.

The Verge AI

Wayve launches $85M employee tender offer at $8.5B valuation

Wayve just raised $85M through an employee tender offer at an $8.5B valuation, joining the trendy practice of AI startups throwing money at employees to prevent talent flight. Because nothing says 'we're definitely not in a bubble' like needing secondary markets to keep your own workers from jumping ship.

TechCrunch AI

🤖 AI General

Trump's plan to redesign every .gov website leads to AI-designed horrors

Trump's grand vision to modernize every government website has predictably devolved into an AI-generated nightmare factory that makes DMV forms look like masterpieces of user experience. The National Design Studio, apparently realizing that letting algorithms loose on bureaucracy might not end well, has quietly pumped the brakes on their digital renovation dreams.

Ars Technica

Claude Science is Anthropic’s newest flagship product

Anthropic has unveiled Claude Science, their latest attempt to automate the noble pursuit of discovery by giving AI the ability to conduct research autonomously. Because apparently we've reached the point where even scientists are outsourcing their curiosity to machines that can follow high-level instructions better than most graduate students.

MIT Tech Review

💻 Tech General

Claude Code is steganographically marking requests

Apparently Claude has been playing digital watermark bingo with user requests, because nothing says 'trust me' like secretly tagging conversations. The discovery has Hacker News doing what it does best: 2,026 upvotes worth of indignant speculation about AI transparency.

Hacker News

The ‘Father of the Internet’ is finally retiring

Vint Cerf, the man who helped birth the internet, is finally logging off from Google after decades of evangelizing the very thing that gave us both Wikipedia and Twitter flame wars. One has to wonder if witnessing what humanity did with his creation influenced the timing of his retirement.

TechCrunch

Cleared by the US, derailed by the UK: Getty’s Shutterstock merger falls apart

Getty's $3.7 billion Shutterstock acquisition just got the regulatory equivalent of a transatlantic breakup—America said yes, Britain said 'absolutely not,' and now everyone's lawyers are having a field day. Nothing quite captures modern capitalism like spending billions on a deal only to have it implode over bureaucratic technicalities across two continents.

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, proper DevTools for Claude that let you peek under the hood at session logs, token usage, and context windows in a visual interface. It's like having x-ray vision for AI conversations, except instead of seeing through walls, you're watching tokens get consumed faster than your monthly budget.

claude-devtools