• Baltimore, grouped together with the DC metro area, ranked third for life sciences R&D talent and 11th for medtech talent in CBRE's new annual report on life sciences talent. [CBRE/Technical.ly]
• The Dali left Baltimore for the first time since it crashed into the Key Bridge. It's en route to Norfolk, Virginia. [Baltimore Sun]
• Under Armour agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit for $434 million. The company maintains its innocence of the allegations in the suit, which was initially filed in 2017 and accused the apparel giant of misleading shareholders during recently returned CEO Kevin Plank's first stint in the position. [Biz Journal]
• Ravens player Sean Ryan visited Greenmount Recreation Center today for a youth-focused event that also served as a groundbreaking for a new AI-focused computer lab. Tech companies Intel and NWN Carousel partnered on the lab, work on which begins this summer. [NWN Carousel]
• Angel St. Jean, CEO of The Equity Brain Trust — which, under its prior name, was one of Technical.ly's 2022 RealLIST Startups — was one of several Black female Reservoir Hill residents who recently critiqued federally funded plans to build an Amtrak tunnel that would run under the neighborhood. [Technical.ly / The 19th]
• Annapolis-based Xona Systems, which works on internet security alternatives to VPNs, raised an $18 million round. [Biz Journal]
• Johns Hopkins researchers put together a simulation to back their conclusion that an east-west Red Line transit option, like the one controversially scrapped by former Gov. Larry Hogan's denial of state funding, could boost job access throughout the city. [Johns Hopkins]