Finding a reliable AI meeting note taker can feel like an impossible task when patient privacy is on the line. For healthcare providers, the “clinician’s burden” is a very real, very exhausting reality. You spend your day balancing the delicate needs of your patients with the relentless requirement for precise documentation. Too often, this leads to “pajama time”—hours spent after a long shift finishing charts that should have been completed during the visit.
Manual note-taking doesn’t just eat your time; it interferes with the doctor-patient relationship. When your head is buried in a laptop or notebook, you miss the non-verbal cues and subtle emotional shifts that are critical to high-quality care. This is where healthcare transcription powered by VOMO transforms the clinical experience. By automating the capture of consultations, VOMO acts as an intelligent AI scribe, allowing you to focus on the patient, not the paperwork.
In a medical setting, “close enough” is never good enough for a transcript. Our technical foundation is built on the Nova-2 model, a cutting-edge speech-to-text engine that delivers up to 99% accuracy even in complex environments. This high-fidelity audio-to-text conversion is specifically designed to handle real-world audio, including background noise and various accents.
VOMO excels at medical documentation because it handles the nuances of healthcare interactions:
Trust is the most important component of any medical tool. VOMO is built with a “Security First” architecture that meets the strict demands of HIPAA compliance and global privacy standards. We understand that patient data is the most sensitive information you handle.
VOMO’s power as an AI scribe extends far beyond the consultation room. In modern medicine, knowledge is constantly being created through webinars, research interviews, and lectures.
Doctors and researchers often need to transcribe YouTube video content from medical conferences or surgical tutorials to stay up to date. Students can record lectures and use VOMO to turn complex medical theories into organized study notes.
For those on the go, our mobile apps for iOS and Android are indispensable. You can easily transcribe voice memo recordings made during hospital rounds or after a research interview, ensuring that your insights are captured and synchronized with the VOMO web platform for further analysis.
Integrating VOMO into your daily routine is simple and requires no complex technical setup:
Q1: Is Vomo.ai HIPAA-compliant? A: Yes. VOMO prioritizes data privacy by using industry-standard encryption and strict privacy controls to meet the rigorous standards of healthcare providers.
Q2: How does the AI handle complex medical jargon? A: Our system is powered by the Nova-2 model, which is specifically designed for high-fidelity transcription. It excels at identifying medical terminology and various accents, achieving up to 99% accuracy with clear audio.
Q3: Can I use the tool for medical lectures and webinars? A: Absolutely. VOMO supports file uploads of almost any length and can even import YouTube links to transcribe and summarize educational content for your research or study.
Using an AI scribe isn’t just about efficiency—it’s about restoring the human element of medicine. When you trust VOMO to handle the documentation, you are free to be present with your patients, listen to their concerns, and provide the best possible care.
Don’t let manual note-taking dictate your schedule. Try Vomo.ai today—start your first secure recording and reclaim your time for what matters most. No credit card is required to get started.
February in the NHL means a change in focus. The standings still matter, but the gap between teams fighting to survive and teams built to contend becomes impossible to miss. It’s a separation that shows up clearly in the odds.
A small group of contenders is shaping the NHL betting landscape. Colorado’s dominance has set the pricing standard, while Tampa Bay’s surge keeps forcing adjustments across the board.
Carolina’s depth makes them steady to project, Edmonton’s star power keeps matchups dangerous, and Vegas brings a playoff-style edge even in February. These teams aren’t just leading, they’re shaping how oddsmakers set numbers every night.
Colorado Avalanche: The League’s Pricing Benchmark
Colorado has been the most focused team in hockey this season, and that dominance is shaping the odds board almost daily. Their consistency has made them the standard oddsmakers build around.
The Avalanche enter the break with a league-best goal differential and steady week-to-week control. Oddsmakers have priced them as one of the NHL’s heaviest regular-season favorites, often pushing bettors toward puck lines or totals instead of simple moneylines.
Nathan MacKinnon’s scoring pace has turned Colorado games into high-event markets, while Cale Makar’s presence keeps the Avalanche driving play for long stretches on both ends of the ice, forcing opponents into constant defensive adjustments and rushed mistakes.
Colorado’s impact goes beyond their own games, shaping Western Conference pricing across the board. That impact is clear in the updated FanDuel NHL odds, where the Avalanche often set the nightly standard.
Tampa Bay Lightning: The Streak That Moved the Market
Few teams have reshaped expectations in recent weeks like Tampa Bay, whose surge has quickly pushed them back into the league’s inner circle. Their form has made every Lightning matchup feel playoff-relevant almost overnight.
An 18-1-1 run doesn’t just boost a team in the standings, it forces oddsmakers to reprice them almost immediately. Tampa’s games have become some of the most closely watched from a betting perspective.
Nikita Kucherov has been at the center of it all, producing at an MVP level and making the Lightning one of the most dangerous offensive teams in hockey. That firepower impacts totals just as much as it impacts win probabilities.
Tampa’s rise has the team breathing down the neck of Colorado and also compressed overall Eastern Conference pricing. When a contender gets this hot in February, it doesn’t just change their own numbers, it shifts the market around them.
Carolina Hurricanes: The Consistency Oddsmakers Trust
Carolina shapes NHL odds in a different way. The Hurricanes may not always be the flashiest team on the board, but they are one of the most stable to project. Oddsmakers consistently respect their structure and consistency each night.
Depth is the reason. Carolina rolls four lines that can defend, pressure, and generate volume. That balance makes them less prone to wild swings, which is why they are often priced as steady favorites even when they aren’t playing in headline matchups.
Recent additions like K’Andre Miller and Nikolaj Ehlers have only strengthened that profile, giving Carolina more finishing ability to match their structure. Those moves have made them tougher to price as anything but a contender.
Staying updated on lineup changes, form trends, and team momentum is essential when evaluating clubs like the Hurricanes. Bettors diving into resources like NHL team news and analysis will have an edge through a deeper understanding of why Carolina remains one of the league’s most dependable contenders.
Edmonton Oilers: Star Power That Keeps Odds Tight
Edmonton remains one of the most fascinating teams for oddsmakers because their pricing is so closely tied to superstar upside.
Connor McDavid leading the league in points changes the expectations of any matchup. Even when Edmonton’s defensive play wobbles, the Oilers are rarely priced as an underdog for long because they’ve been known to flip a game in minutes.
Special teams play a major role here. Edmonton’s power play is operating at over 31 percent, which keeps their games highly sensitive to penalties and situational swings.
A quick snapshot of what drives Edmonton’s market impact:
No contender shapes “high-upside” pricing more than the Oilers. One explosive stretch from their stars can flip a market in minutes.
Vegas Golden Knights: The Team That Warps Matchups
Vegas doesn’t always dominate the spotlight, but they affect NHL odds because of how difficult they are to play against. Oddsmakers rarely give opponents an easy number against their style.
The Golden Knights bring a heavier, structured style that often lowers scoring environments and makes games feel tighter. Oddsmakers reflect that in shorter totals and more competitive pricing, even against top opponents.
Vegas is also the kind of team that becomes more dangerous late in the year, when physicality rises and games resemble playoff hockey. Their grinding approach tends to travel well in tight postseason-style matchups.
Matchups against Vegas tend to be priced with extra respect, because their style travels well and rarely collapses. Even elite opponents often face tighter spreads than expected.
The Olympic Break Creates a Pause and a Reset
The NHL’s Olympic hiatus is a unique moment for the odds landscape.
A roster freeze limits major movement, meaning markets may stay relatively steady for a couple of weeks. Injuries or fatigue coming out of Olympic play, however, could reshape projections quickly.
The restart will also compress the final stretch, making seeding battles and division races more intense and more influential in nightly pricing. Every game will carry sharper implications for both teams and lines.
For bettors, this break is a checkpoint. The league’s top teams have already shaped the market, but the second half will determine whether those numbers were justified.
The Teams Setting the NHL’s Betting Tone
Colorado, Tampa Bay, Carolina, Edmonton, and Vegas aren’t just piling up wins, they’re shaping how the NHL is priced night after night. Their dominance, streaks, depth, and star power drive the league’s biggest matchups and most influential totals.
Odds are ultimately a measure of trust, and these contenders have earned more of it than anyone else right now.
When play resumes after the break, the margins will only tighten. The teams at the top aren’t simply chasing a championship, they’re defining the betting landscape along the way.
1990 Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project Class.
Here we are! Again!!
If you have been following our Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project, you know we have asked the question: What if the PFHOF had begun in January 1946?
After soliciting and obtaining a passionate group of football fans and historians, we sent out a ballot for a Preliminary Vote, in which each voter selected 25 names as their semi-finalists and five names for the Senior Pool. We then asked the group to vote for their 15 Finalists in the Modern Era and 3 in the Senior Category. The final stage was to vote for their five Modern Era inductee and one Senior inductee.
This is the result of the 45th official class.
Below are the final results of this project based on 31 votes.
Remember that we have reverted back to the top five candidates entering the Hall in the Modern Era
This is for the “Modern Era”
*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1990:
|
Player |
Year of Eligibility |
Vote Total |
|
Jack Lambert LB |
1 |
24 |
|
Jack Youngblood DE |
1 |
19 |
|
Ken Houston DB |
5 |
17 |
|
Bob Hayes SE-WR |
10 |
14 |
|
Franco Harris RB |
1 |
12 |
|
Ron Yary T |
3 |
10 |
|
Lee Roy Selmon DE |
1 |
9 |
|
Dick LeBeau DB |
13 |
8 |
|
Dave Wilcox LB |
11 |
8 |
|
Tom Mack G |
7 |
8 |
|
Roger Werhli DB |
3 |
7 |
|
Jackie Smith TE |
7 |
6 |
|
Randy Gradishar LB |
2 |
5 |
|
Bob Griese QB |
5 |
4 |
|
Dave Casper TE |
1 |
3 |
This is for the “Senior Era”,
*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1990.
|
Gene Lipscomb DT |
3 |
15 |
|
Buckets Goldenberg FB |
20 |
10 |
|
Pat Harder FB |
12 |
4 |
|
None of the Above |
N/A |
3 |
This is for the “Coaches/Contributors”,
*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1990.
|
Don Coryell (Coach) |
2 |
20 |
|
Tex Schramm (Owner) |
11 |
6 |
|
Wellington Mara (Owner) |
4 |
2 |
|
None of the Above |
|
1 |
About the 1990 Inductees:
Jack Lambert, LB, PIT 1974-84: Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 1st Ballot. Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1990.
The Steelers had already put together a powerful defensive corps before they used their Second Round Pick in 1974 to take Jack Lambert, the MAC Defensive Player of the Year two years before.
Lambert became the Steelers’ starting Middle Linebacker early in his rookie season, and he was so impressive that he was named the Defensive Rookie of the Year. Lambert was arguably the final piece of the puzzle to create the Steelers dynasty, as Lambert, Joe Greene, Terry Bradshaw, and Franco Harris would win the Super Bowl that year. As we know, that would be the first of four Super Bowls of the decade, and Lambert was at the heart of all of them.
Lambert would become known as one of the hardest and most feared hitters in the National Football League. Lambert won the AP Defensive Player of the Year in 1976, and with all due respect to Greene, Lambert was now the top dog of the Steel Curtain. The Linebacker was a perennial Pro Bowl Selection from 1975 to 1983, and in addition to his 1976 First Team All-Pro, he had five more from 1979 to 1983.
Had Lambert not suffered from severe turf toe in 1984 (causing him to retire that year), it is conceivable he could have continued to pile on accolades. Lambert left the game with a sick rate of 136 Approximate Value to 146 Games, one of the best ratios of its kind at his position.
Jack Youngblood, DE, RAM 1971-84: Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 1st Ballot. Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001.
Jack Youngblood came from the University of Florida, and the 1st Round Pick would be asked to fill the shoes of possibly the most iconic defensive force in Rams history, Deacon Jones. Considering the pressure he had to feel that he was under, it is more than safe to say that he did one hell of a job!
In his third season in the NFL (1973), Youngblood was named to his first of seven consecutive Pro Bowls, five of which earned him First Team All-Pro honors. Although the Quarterback Sack was not an official statistic when he played, Youngblood is believed to have recorded 151.5 sacks over his career.
In a tough sport, Youngblood was one of the toughest and most durable players, missing only one game in his 14 seasons, and is best remembered by Rams fans for playing with a broken fibula in both the NFC Championship Game and Super Bowl XIV against the Steelers. Although the Rams lost, the legend of Jack Youngblood grew to even greater heights in those two games.
Ken Houston, DB, HOU 1967-72 & WAS 1973-80. Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 5th Ballot. Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986.
From Prairie View A&M, Ken Houston was taken way back in the 9th Round of the 1967 Draft, and it could have been the biggest steal of that year's draft. Ironically, the Oilers would make the worst trade in franchise history when they sent him to Washington years later.
The Safety was a starter as a rookie, starting nine of his 14 Games, and he made the Pro Bowl the following year and again over the next four seasons. Houston was easily one of the top Safeties in the AFL/AFC when he competed as an Oiler, and he picked off 25 passes, returning nine for Touchdowns.
The Oilers had a superstar in their defensive back corps, but they made a tactical error; as though they were struggling, they traded him to Washington for five players. None of the players that Houston acquired would be decent
Houston continued his streak of Pro Bowls, adding six more to have a twelve-year streak. Unlike while wearing the oil derrick, Houston was a First Team All-Pro in two of his seasons (1975 & 1978), and he had 24 Interceptions as a Redskin. Houston was also regarded as one of the game’s most punishing tacklers, and he was one of the fastest players on the field. He retired after the 1980 season, the year after his run of consecutive Pro Bowls ended.
Bob Hayes, SE-WR, DAL 1965-74 & SFO 1975. Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 10th Ballot. Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2009.
A two-sport athlete at Florida A&M, “Bullet” Bob Hayes starred in the 1964 Olympics, winning two Gold Medals (100m and 4x100m relay). The Dallas Cowboys drafted him in the 7th Round, but he was not yet a refined football player, and it was widely assumed he would be a work in progress. It did not take long to make it work!
Hayes’ explosive speed caused havoc for defenses and forced opponents to adopt zone schemes and bump-and-run to limit his advantage. He led the NFL in Touchdown Receptions in his first two years, and later propelled the Cowboys to their first Super Bowl.
He compiled 7,414 Rushing Yards with 71 TDs, and is arguably the reason why General Managers look at 40-yard times!
Franco Harris, RB, PIT 1972-83 & SEA 1984. Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 1st Ballot. Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1990.
With all due respect to the many great Running Backs that the Pittsburgh Steelers had, they are all in line behind Franco Harris, who is still the team’s all-time leading rusher.
Harris debuted in the professional ranks in 1972 for the Steelers, a team he didn’t have to travel far from, as he was a star at Penn State. The Running Back won the Offensive Rookie of the Year, going to the Pro Bowl and rushing for 1,055 Yards and 10 Touchdowns. This was the year Harris benefited from the "Immaculate Reception," a still-debated play in which the Steelers beat the Raiders in the playoffs. Pittsburgh didn't win it all that year, but they had a Running Back in tow who could help them.
Harris was one of the best Running Backs of the decade, going to the Pro Bowl every season from 1972 to 1980. Harris was a First Team All-Pro in 1977 (1,162 Rushing Yards and 11 TDs), but he arguably was better the season before with a league-leading 14 TDs and 1,128 Rushing Yards. Harris helped propel the Steelers to four Super Bowl titles, earning MVP honors in the first. Over 19 Playoff Games, Harris had 2,060 Yards From Scrimmage with 17 Touchdowns, an incredible number over intense situations.
Harris was with the Steelers until 1983, playing one final year in Seattle before retiring. Overall, Harris would accumulate 14,234 Yards From Scrimmage with an even 100 Touchdowns.
Gene Lipscomb, DT, RAM 1953-55, BAL 1956-60 & PIT 1961-62. Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 3rd Senior Ballot. Was never inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Gene “Big Daddy” Lipscomb enlisted in the military and played football at USMC Camp Pendleton, so if you think the teams of the NFL lightly recruited him, you would be right!
The 300-pound Lipscomb would, however, sign with the Los Angeles Rams in 1952 and would win the starting Right Defensive Tackle job in 1953, but went on to greater success when he was traded to the Baltimore Colts. "Big Daddy" would help anchor the Colts to the 1958 and 1959 NFL Championships, and not so coincidentally, he was named a First Team All-Pro for his efforts. Lipscomb went to Pittsburgh in 1961 and went to his third Pro Bowl in 1962, but that would be his final year in Pro Football, as sadly, his career ended when he died of a heroin overdose in May of 1963.
Don Coryell, Coach, STL 1973-77 & SDG 1978-86. Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1990 on his 2nd Coach/Contributor Ballot. Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2023.
Coryell was dubbed “Air Coryell” for placing a premium on the passing game and for creating a unique rhythm, forcing defenses to cover all parts of the field. Tight Ends, Running Backs would go in motion, Receivers had no set start point, and the ball would be going to the target before the receiver would get there. Coryell made deep routes a major part of his offense and changed how Tight Ends were played, making them a bigger part of the offensive target mix. All of this is commonplace today, but it wasn’t happening before Coryell literally changed the way the game was played.
He would begin this revolution with the St. Louis Cardinals, where he would win two consecutive division titles, but it was in San Diego that he had the Quarterback he wanted (Dan Fouts), where he was really able to bring his vision to light. His Chargers won the division three times and led the National Football League in passing for six consecutive seasons, a record that still stands today.
Coryell took his teams to the playoffs often, though he never made it to the Super Bowl; his offensive mindset changed the game. That is a Hall of Fame worthy!
While most of the sporting world is looking toward the Super Bowl, the NFL Honors has always been our primary focus, as it features the annual Pro Football Hall of Fame Class. This year, we learned that five new entrants, Drew Brees, Larry Fitzgerald, Luke Kuechly, Adam Vinatieri, and Roger Craig (Senior), will be Canton-bound.
Drew Brees: SDG 2001-05 & NOR 2006-20. After five years in San Diego, Brees ascended to superstar status in New Orleans. Brees led the Saints to their first and only Super Bowl win, was a two-time Offensive Player of the Year, and was selected to 13 Pro Bowls. He threw for 80,358 Yards and 571 Touchdowns, and is a Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee on his first attempt.
Larry Fitzgerald: ARI 2004-20. Fitzgerald had a stellar career, earning 11 Pro Bowls, one First Team All-Pro selection, and was named the 2016 Walter Payton Man of the Year. Twice leading the league in Receptions as well as Touchdown Passes, Fitzgerald had 1,432 Receptions (Second all-time), 17,492 Yards (second all-time), and 121 Touchdowns (sixth all-time). Like Brees, Fitzgerald only needed one year of eligibility to enter the Hall.
Luke Kuechly: CAR 2012-19. Kuechly was a strong contender to enter Canton on his first year of eligibility, as he is a former Defensive Rookie of the Year (2012) and Defensive Player of the Year in 2013. A two-time leader in Combined Tackles, Kuechly was a seven-time Pro Bowl and five-time First Team All-Pro. He enters the Hall in his second year of the ballot.
Adam Vinatieri: NWE 1996-2005 & IND 2006-19. Entering his first year on the ballot, Vinatieri was a clutch performer who won four Super Bowls and was a three-time First Team All-Pro. He is the all-time leader in Points Scored (2,673) and Field Goals Made (599). Like Kuechly, he is a second-year inductee.
Roger Craig: Running Back, SFO 1983-90, RAI 1991 & MIN 1992-93. The first player to accumulate 1,000 Yards Rushing and Receiving, Craig won three Super Bowls, was the Offensive Player of the Year, earned four Pro Bowls, and was a First Team All-Pro. From Scrimmage, he had 73 Touchdowns and 13,100 Yards. Craig was a Modern Finalist in 2010 and a Senior Finalist in 2020, and is the only candidate to enter via the Seniors/Coaches/Contributor section.
Thanks to Clark Judge, who posted his roundup on Jack Silverstein’s WordPress site (take a look at this, as it is worth the read, and while you are there, read Jack’s other articles!), we have additional information about the cuts.
Jahri Evans, Torry Holt, Eli Manning, Reggie Wayne, and Kevin Williams were cut from 15 to 10, with Holt’s first cut being the biggest surprise, as he was a top-seven finisher last year. Holt still has time, but this is a significant step backward.
Frank Gore, Jason Witten, and Darren Woodson were then cut from 10 to 7, and Willie Anderson, Marshal Yanda, and Terrell Suggs made it to the final seven before failing to make the vote. As such, Anderson, Suggs, and Yanda are automatic finalists for 2027.
In late March, we will begin work on revising our Notinhalloffame list of those to consider for the PFHOF. This will reflect the removal of the five who were elected, the addition of the big names who are eligible, and changes to existing players based on your votes and comments.
We here at Notinhalloffame would like to congratulate the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026.