Wednesday, October 23, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Montgomery County to establish Institute for Health Computing in North Bethesda, billed as a major economic driver

Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich signed Thursday a multiagency agreement to launch a new higher education institute in North Bethesda dedicated to artificial intelligence in health care, with the goal of establishing a magnetic academic-industrial complex akin to what’s envisioned for Northern Virginia’s National Landing. The budding collaboration — dubbed The University of Maryland 3 – Institute for Health Computing, or UM-3-IHC — involves Montgomery County, the University of Maryland campuses in Baltimore and College Park and the University of Maryland Medical System Corporation (UMMS), a hospital network.

LifeBridge Health will establish Baltimore regional campus for George Washington University medical students

Sinai Hospital of Baltimore will house a regional medical campus for medical students attending The George Washington University, under an agreement announced Wednesday. LifeBridge Health, which operates Sinai, reached an agreement with George Washington to establish a campus at the hospital this spring for the university’s School of Medicine and Health Sciences.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Salisbury-area home prices rise 6.8% in October, with houses for sale in high demand

A typical Wicomico County home listed for $321,490 in October, up 6.8% from the previous month’s $301,163, an analysis of data from Realtor.com shows. The median list home price in October was up about 23.6% from October 2021. Wicomico County’s median home was 2,150 square feet for a listed price of $159 per square foot.

Read More: Delmarva Now
Johns Hopkins University unveils designs for building honoring Henrietta Lacks

Johns Hopkins University on Thursday laid out design plans for a new building to honor the legacy of Henrietta Lacks, a Baltimore woman whose cells have been the basis of research for many medical breakthroughs. The around 34,000-square-foot building will be located on the corner of Ashland and Rutland avenues in East Baltimore. It will be used for a mix of community discussions and to house the university’s Berman Institute of Bioethics and the Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, Vines Architecture, the design firm, told the city’s Urban Design and Architecture Advisory Panel (UDAAP).

US authorities investigate crypto exchange FTX, AP source says

The swift collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX sent more shockwaves through the crypto world on Thursday, with authorities now investigating the firm for potential securities violations and analysts bracing for a further downturn in crypto prices. FTX had agreed earlier this week to sell itself to bigger rival Binance after experiencing the cryptocurrency equivalent of a bank run. Customers fled the exchange after becoming concerned about whether FTX had sufficient capital.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Kinshasa, Grand Hotel, Casino
Defying inflation worries, US casinos have best quarter

Inflation? High gas prices? American gamblers are shrugging them off — and losing money at casinos at a record pace. Figures released Wednesday show the U.S. commercial casino industry had its best quarter ever, winning over $15 billion from gamblers in the third quarter of this year. The American Gaming Association, the trade organization for the casino industry, says the gambling halls are on track to have their best year ever in 2022.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
North Oaks Senior Living to undergo major renovation

North Oaks Senior Living in Pikesville on Wednesday announced a multimillion-dollar renovation plan is underway to modernize its first and second floors that includes the dining room, library, reception area, and social hall. Pikesville-based ARK Design LLC was chosen as the firm to lead the project. Founded by Adele Greenebaum, ARK Design will manage space planning and construction, schematic conceptual design, interior design, construction administration, and artwork and accessory selection.

Elon Musk seeks to reassure advertisers on Twitter after chaos

Elon Musk sought to reassure big companies that advertise on Twitter that his chaotic takeover of the social media platform won’t harm their brands, acknowledging that some “dumb things” might happen on his way to creating what he says will be a better, safer user experience.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
How D.C. area’s closest Amazon fulfillment center is ramping up for the holidays

“We have done a good job of getting people in early so that they’re trained,” Fisher said. “We find that that’s the best because when things start to kind of ramp up and get a little crazier, the more familiar they are with the building, it’s better from a safety standpoint and a quality standpoint.” BWI2 opened as Maryland’s first fulfillment center in 2015 and one of the first robotics centers in Amazon’s network, spokeswoman Rachael Lighty said during a tour of the facility on Nov. 8. The building is massive, with four floors totaling 1.2 million square feet.

taking sinovac covid-19 vaccination injection
Novavax says its Omicron-specific vaccine candidate works as a booster

Novavax Inc. is out with new data that makes a case for its Omicron variant-tailored Covid-19 vaccine candidate — and less so for another shot it’s also been testing to attack two strains simultaneously. The Gaithersburg biotech had conducted a phase 3 trial of two experimental Covid vaccines — one designed to protect against just the Omicron variant known as BA.1 and another bivalent shot to protect against both the original and Omicron strains — and compared their results with that of the company’s existing Covid-19 vaccine now on the market. That test showed that the BA.1 variant vaccine provoked a stronger immune response in people not previously exposed to Covid, compared with people who received Novavax’s existing vaccine, which was developed based on the original version of the virus and is now available in the U.S. for primary, secondary and booster doses.

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