logo
Meet our new reporter: Baltimore County native brings global experience to covering Maryland's digital divide

Meet our new reporter: Baltimore County native brings global experience to covering Maryland's digital divide

Technical.ly21-05-2025
Maria Eberhart remembers when laptops arrived in her school district.
In 2014, in Baltimore County, a racially and economically diverse jurisdiction that stretches from the metro suburbs to rural areas along the state's northern border, that was not a given. Nor was the digital literacy program's success, as an outside evaluation found four years later.
Come this summer, Eberhart will be exploring how tech makes its way into school systems throughout the region and state as Technical.ly's newest reporter in Baltimore.
'I'm interested in tracking the expansion process of educational technology around Maryland and how students fall through the cracks in underserved areas,' she said.
Eberhart comes to Technical.ly via Report for America (RFA), a philanthropic initiative that places emerging journalists in local outlets to cover communities and issues underserved by the existing media ecosystem. During their tenure, corps members dive headlong into specific topics while receiving mentorship and training through the employer and RFA, which will match local funding to support the position. (If you or your organization wants to see more Baltimore and Maryland stories of innovation, contact CEO Chris Wink to help us fully fund this role.)
The University of Southern California journalism school alum joins our distributed newsroom, which has previously hosted RFA corps members in Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Baltimore. She'll work closely with this writer and lead reporter Kaela Roeder as she reports on Maryland's urban-rural digital divide, as well as the related tech, innovation and workforce development topics Technical.ly has been covering in Baltimore for nearly 12 years.
So much of our current tech discourse revolves around AI and new, world-changing tools. While these discussions have a place, it's vital to cover the communities that lack the fundamentals.
Maria Eberhart
The timing couldn't be more urgent. Digital equity in all its avenues — device adoption, broadband access and speeds, corporate oligopoly and government priorities among them — remains an issue in Greater Baltimore and Maryland. Its aftershocks ripple beyond schools into local economies, which suffer if their prospective workforce cannot access the resources needed to participate in them. The current federal administration's negative stance on net neutrality and the Digital Equity Act threatens to slow or even reverse progress on a situation that disproportionately hurts Maryland's rural areas and its redlined, largely Black and brown urban communities.
Eberhart has worked in both local and national journalism, as well as international education. She previously interned at the Baltimore Sun, where she covered topics ranging from disability services worker training to efforts to make the local skateboarding community more equitable for LGBTQ skaters. She served as an editorial assistant for the music media juggernaut Pitchfork and an administrative coordinator for New York Public Radio's newsroom. She joins Technical.ly following a stint teaching English in Bogotá, Colombia.
She marries this with a palpable passion for where she's from. Learn more about Eberhart's journey and reporting interests before catching her around town starting in July.
This Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.
How did you get into journalism?
I started writing for my high school's student newspaper and fell in love with storytelling. I went to a big school and loved how journalism introduced me to different parts of the student body. I spent a lot of late nights laying out pages and editing articles, but after catching the reporting bug, I couldn't stop.
What excites you about covering the rural-urban digital divide in Maryland?
I'm excited to connect with the lawmakers and activists working to tackle this digital divide in Maryland. So much of our current tech discourse revolves around AI and new, world-changing tools. While these discussions have a place, it's vital to cover the communities that lack the fundamentals.
I was a Baltimore County Public School student when the district introduced laptops into the classroom. I'm interested in tracking the expansion process of educational technology around Maryland and how students fall through the cracks in underserved areas.
What questions are you hoping to answer in your work here?
It's great to see Technical.ly reporting on emerging entrepreneurs in the Baltimore area. I'm curious to learn more about the tech industry's growth here. While it might not always make national headlines, there's a vibrant ecosystem developing.
In my work, I want to explore what role tech expansion has in shaping the city's economic future and whether its prosperity will address Baltimore's systemic inequities or further entrench them.
You'll be moving back to your hometown region — what did you miss the most?
I've missed the music scene in Baltimore! I grew up going to concerts, and I haven't seen the same energy in other cities at shows. There are so many great established and DIY venues that support a robust arts community. I'm always bragging to my non-Baltimorean friends about the wealth of musical talent from the area.
What do you like to do outside of work?
I'm a big fan of film photography and love shooting portraits of my friends and family in my free time. I'm working on my darkroom skills, and I hope to learn more about printing
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

After a quiet year, Black and Mobile is going on an East Coast comeback tour
After a quiet year, Black and Mobile is going on an East Coast comeback tour

Technical.ly

time5 days ago

  • Technical.ly

After a quiet year, Black and Mobile is going on an East Coast comeback tour

Startup profile: Black and Mobile Founded by: David Cabello and Aaron Cabello Year founded: 2019 Headquarters: Philadelphia, PA Sector: Foodtech Funding and valuation: Bootstrapped Key ecosystem partners: Techstars, Google, Penn Medicine Food delivery startup Black and Mobile is planning a summer splash with a 60-city tour that follows a year of behind-the-scenes improvements. Founded in 2019 to connect residents with Black-owned restaurants in their cities, the Philadelphia-headquartered company already operates in Philly, Atlanta, Baltimore, New York and Los Angeles. Now it's time to 'activate' in more markets, Black and Mobile founder David Cabello told After the tour, he's aiming to hit $185,000 to $225,000 in annual recurring revenue — and grow from there. 'If we have options in every city [on the tour],' Cabello said, 'and if we can generate an order a day, that's putting us over $1 million.' Currently, word of mouth is drawing new users from around the country. When many open the app, however, they find no listings local to their region. To change that, Cabello plans to spend the tour signing up new restaurants, hiring drivers, connecting with customers — and creating a lot of social content. 'TikTok has been huge for us. I used it for the first time last year … the numbers were crazy. Now, for seven months straight, we're going to be posting every single day,' he said about the account, which currently sits around 10,000 followers. That potential growth in visibility could determine whether Black and Mobile starts raising capital. Once revenue hits about $30,000 to $40,000 monthly — as opposed to the current burn rate of $4,000 to $5,000 — Cabello said he'll consider looking for investors. 'Being lean is keeping me away from getting scammed and trusting my family and although I'm going slower, I still own most of my company,' he said, instead of sharing ownership with an investor or risking getting pushed out. The tour kicks off Aug. 1 in Trenton, New Jersey. From there, Cabello will travel to South Florida, then loop around to Houston, Minneapolis and dozens of cities in between. If all goes well, he plans a West Coast swing in 2026. 'Restaurants are just not going to sign up just because we're a Black-owned delivery service,' Cabello said. 'They got to see us doing the work in the community.' A mission-driven origin Black and Mobile began after Cabello, then a driver for food delivery apps like Postmates and Caviar, decided to build a platform that would circulate dollars within the Black community. He co-founded the business with his brother, Aaron Cabello. In its first two years, the startup expanded to three cities, upgraded its app and even landed a cameo in the Pharrell Williams and Jay-Z music video 'Entrepreneur.' The early success landed Black and Mobile a place on 2021 RealLIST Startups and 2020 Startup of the Year award. Black and Mobile relaunched in 2022 with $10,000 it won in a contest hosted by the Black Innovation Alliance called the Back in the Black Tour. The next year, it launched a $1 million crowdfunding campaign to support its efforts and in 2024, it participated in Techstars' spring 2024 cohort. 'What we've been seeing is that people would rather order through a Black-owned delivery service,' Cabello said, 'because they feel like they're making an impact.' Turning hurdles into pillars of success Black and Mobile's growth hasn't come without setbacks. Early internal personnel conflicts and getting caught in a couple scams slowed momentum. In its second year, the company refunded $400,000 due to a lack of drivers and tech infrastructure, per Cabello. He's now intentionally keeping the team lean. Black and Mobile relies on a crew of independent contractors to keep overhead low. The company will only consider more hiring as volume increases, according to Cabello. Despite these constraints, wins continue to pile up. Since March, Black and Mobile has been listed alongside DoorDash and Uber Eats in Google search results for food delivery, which Cabello said boosted app downloads by over 50%. Compared to the competition, however, 'we're not meant to be a cheap service,' Cabello said. 'We're definitely meant for the mission and the purpose.' It's also staying true to its Philly roots. Black and Mobile partners with Penn Medicine to deliver meals to vulnerable community members, and distributes 100 food bags to local middle schools each month. For the founder, it's always been about uplifting Black-owned businesses. He's open to others replicating his approach, as long as they're in it for the right reasons. 'I would never patent what I'm doing,' Cabello said, 'because I want people to go help Black people.'

Pittsburgh weekly roundup: Skild opens San Francisco office; Ansys acquisition complete; Forge AI Pitch Challenge
Pittsburgh weekly roundup: Skild opens San Francisco office; Ansys acquisition complete; Forge AI Pitch Challenge

Technical.ly

time18-07-2025

  • Technical.ly

Pittsburgh weekly roundup: Skild opens San Francisco office; Ansys acquisition complete; Forge AI Pitch Challenge

This week in Pittsburgh, the data center gold rush, advice from angel investors on raising capital and more. Read on for weekly roundup of top news in the region. 📰 News Incubator: What else to know • What happens when a data center comes to town? PA's Dorrance Township doesn't want to find out. With real estate developers sniffing around for potential, this rural community is setting up protections before applications start rolling in. [ ] • Skild AI is expanding to San Francisco, a controversial move in the Pittsburgh startup scene. When Abridge announced its intention for a similar move in March, it sparked a debate about why the local talent scene isn't enough for these hypergrowth firms. [ Pittsburgh Biz Times / ] • Synopsys finally completed its $35 billion acquisition of Cannonsburg-based Ansys, after more than a year checking all the legal boxes. [ Synopsys / ] • Protestors surrounded the Energy and Innovation Summit, as Pittsburghers spoke up against Carnegie Mellon University's decision to host President Donald Trump and the impact of AI development on climate change. [ / Pittsburgh City Paper / WESA] • Apply by Aug. 8 for a chance to be recognized as one of the region's top AI startups — and win $50,000 — at the Forge AI Pitch Challenge. [ AI Horizons ] • People aren't moving for jobs, but instead to places they want to live and then finding jobs there, Chris Wink writes in his latest column. In Pittsburgh, telling its unique stories of relative cost of living and quirky culture can be the thing that pulls talent in. [ ] • It just got easier for union workers to report employer violations. Allegheny County launched the confidential Right to Organize Incident Report Form to document the errs, but you should still file a formal complaint, too. [ Allegheny County ] • ICYMI: Catch up on the top takeaways from local startup CEOs Shiv Rao, John Thornton, Jake Loosararian and more at the AI Horizons kickoff event earlier this week. [ Pittsburgh Slack channel ] • If your startup exit strategies rely on M&A, start by finding the right advisor to guide you through it. Here are 10 tips to sift through the candidates. [ ] 🗓️ On the Calendar • Fix your gaming keyboard and get back to gameplay at a $25 electronics repair class hosted by Hackers Guild PGH on July 19. [ Sign up ] • Get access to 3D printers at Prototype PGH at a training session for beginners on July 19. The event costs $10 to attend, but no one will be turned away due to lack of funds. [ Register ] • Level up your woodworking skills at HackPGH's picture frame design class. The July 20 event costs $185 and is recommended for folks with beginner woodworking knowledge. [ Attend ] • Head to the University of Pittsburgh for JuliaCon from July 22 to 25. Prices vary, but for an additional fee, you can attend a Pirates game with fellow enthusiasts of the coding language. [ Get tickets ] • Learn how to access your Bitcoin on the Solana blockchain, followed by a Federal Galley hangout, with BitDevs Pittsburgh on July 23. [ More info ] • Brush up on your sketching skills and meet new people at Ascender's Pictionary Happy Hour on July 24. [ Details here ] • Procrastinate on your latest project by catching up with friends or finally make time for that deadline you've been putting off at Avenu: Meyran's coworking summer Fridays on July 25. [ Learn more ]

DC accrues $514.6M of VC in Q2 — a drop from the start of 2025
DC accrues $514.6M of VC in Q2 — a drop from the start of 2025

Technical.ly

time18-07-2025

  • Technical.ly

DC accrues $514.6M of VC in Q2 — a drop from the start of 2025

Venture capital investment in the DC region slowed in the second quarter of the year, and the White House's lack of clarity on regulation and policy could be to blame. Companies nabbed $514.6 million across 64 deals in the DMV, according to the latest Venture Monitor report released quarterly by PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association. That's a sharp decline from the first quarter of the year, with its reported $1.3 billion across 60 deals — meaning this most recent quarter saw lower deal values. The region isn't alone in venture capitalists writing smaller checks, per the Venture Monitor report. This is part of a broader, 'more cautious investment climate' across the nation, said Tahira Dosani, cofounder and managing partner at ResilienceVC. 'We're no longer in this 'growth at all cost' mentality,' Dosani, who announced a new $56 million fund earlier this year, told 'We're in an era where there's a focus on capital efficiency, on sustainable pathways to profitability and the broader tightening of fewer companies successfully raising rounds because investors are being more selective.' This has been the mindset for the last couple of years, per Dosani. DC has had a handful of blowout quarters, but they're often led by major raises from established companies. Rockville nuclear power company X Energy nabbed about half of the funds at the beginning of the year, as did the e-cigarette giant Juul to close 2024. This is why looking at data quarter-to-quarter can be difficult, explained Les Alexander, a professor at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business. In 2024, companies in the DMV collectively raised $4.3 billion — the highest amount since 2021. 'I often find that in some markets like the DMV, quarter to quarter activity can be impacted by a few larger deals,' Alexander wrote in a statement to 'so you need to be careful to not draw broad conclusions without longer data trends.' Unstable regulations could lead to lower activity ResilienceVC's Dosani noted that uncertainty around policies like tariffs are making investors more cautious. There's generally a tendency toward deregulation under the Trump administration, which can benefit business, but there needs to be clarity, she said. 'Regulatory uncertainty always makes it harder to make decisions,' she said. Because of this precariousness, it's more difficult for investors to vet startups adequately, said Elena Loutskina, a professor at the Darden School of Business. 'The global economic uncertainty, including one about tariffs, hampers VCs' ability to properly evaluate the prospects of given startups,' Loutskina wrote to in an email. 'This makes investments exceptionally risky and unattractive.' Alexander agrees. Inconsistent trade policy is causing investors to be wary, he said. The economic picture also depends on industry, he noted. He's already seen climate technology companies nab less funding because of policy changes. 'On the other hand, defense tech and cybersecurity, which are attractive investment areas for companies and investors in the DMV region, is seeing increased deal activity with the favorable support from policymakers,' he said. What startups — and investors — should know Securing investments will continue to be challenging for startups, especially for those in early stages, Alexander said. But AI companies will likely continue to see funding, he said. Fundraising for the capital to invest is slowing, too, Alexander said. That's because limited partners aren't getting liquidity back from prior funds they've invested in and a lack of exits, ResilienceVC's Dosani explained. Because of all of this, founders need to be capital-efficient, she said. They also need to demonstrate clear traction to investors and show profitability. 'It's not necessarily a bad thing,' Dosani said. 'It just is the reality of this market, and I think what it will translate into is that … the best founders are the ones getting the cap[ital].' This constriction also requires investors to be more supportive of founders outside the money, she said. That means being more hands-on in business strategies, for example. 'Founders have to think about how they tell their story, how they execute and operate their businesses,' Dosani said, 'and I think investors have to do the same.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store