Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ

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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ

Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ

@GeneralLiu1

Lover of transit, Cpop, urban planning, Vtubers, and city life. In that order. Any/All, 23 y/o ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€โšง๏ธ

Boston, MA Entrou em ลžubat 2022
294 Seguindo308 Seguidores
Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
Hayden
Hayden@the_transit_guyยท
Amtrak please bring beautiful physical timetables back.
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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
Chris ๐Ÿฆ
Chris ๐Ÿฆ@TrashPanda08xยท
Amtrak Borealis projected annual ridership: 125k Actual ridership: 215k Amtrak Mardi Gras projected annual ridership: 52k Ridership 8 months into service: 100k Don't let people tell you we "Don't need trains, no one would ride them"
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daviss ๐Ÿ“ธ@daviss

Not enough trains too many riders: "Rail ridership locally is surging. In fiscal year 2025, just under 200,000 travelers got on or off Amtrak trains at St. Paulโ€™s Union Depot. That marked a 58% increase over the previous fiscal year and was the highest ridership in the Twin Cities by far in the past 15 years." startribune.com/as-ridership-sโ€ฆ

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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonkaยท
Part 2. A hospital in India can take someone who has been blind for years and give them their sight back in six minutes. It costs less than a pizza. And they have done it 6.8 million times. The hospital is called Aravind. It was started in 1976 by a man named Govindappa Venkataswamy, known as Dr. V. He was 58, had just been forced to retire, and his hands were crippled by arthritis so bad he could barely hold a pen. He had scalpels custom-made for his twisted fingers and still performed over 100,000 eye surgeries in his life. Two years before he retired, Dr. V walked into a McDonaldโ€™s for the first time. He looked at the menu, looked at the assembly line in the back, and came out with an odd idea. He would sell cataract surgeries the way McDonaldโ€™s sold burgers. So he mortgaged his house. His brothers and sisters pooled their life savings. He opened an 11-bed clinic in Madurai. Then he flew to Chicago and enrolled in Hamburger University, the actual McDonaldโ€™s training program, to learn how the assembly line worked. At Aravind, cataract surgery is broken into small steps. Nurses prep one patient while the surgeon operates on another. Each surgeon switches between two tables. The operation itself takes about six minutes. So far Aravind has seen 55 million patients and done 6.8 million surgeries. More than half of those patients paid nothing. Not a rupee. The ones who can pay subsidize the ones who cannot. A surgery at Aravind costs between $40 and $125 depending on the lens. In the US, Medicare pays about $1,766 for the same operation. Aravind also has better results. Their complication rate is 1.5%, and serious eye infections happen in about 2 out of every 10,000 surgeries. Most American hospitals are not that good. They built their own lens factory too, called Aurolab. Imported lenses were costing hundreds of dollars each, so Aurolab makes them for around ten. Today Aurolab produces roughly 10% of the worldโ€™s eye lenses and ships to 160 countries. Every year, Aravind sends doctors and nurses out to rural villages for 2,500 eye camps. They screen people who have been blind for years, bus them to the hospital, operate on them, and bus them back home seeing. Dr. V died in 2006. His family still runs Aravind. Harvard Business School has been teaching the story as a case study since 1993. I still do not see it in my feed. A 58-year-old with crippled hands walked into a McDonaldโ€™s. Fifty years later, 6.8 million blind people can see.
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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
Jeremiah Johnson ๐ŸŒ
Jeremiah Johnson ๐ŸŒ@JeremiahDJohnsยท
Thank you Jimmy Carter
Jeremiah Johnson ๐ŸŒ tweet media
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

A parasite that has been eating people for 3,500 years is about to be wiped off the planet. It infected 3.5 million people in 1986. Last year, it infected 10. And I have not seen it make a single front page. It is called Guinea worm. You drink contaminated water from a pond in a poor village. A year later, a worm up to three feet long starts coming out of your leg through a burning blister. There is no pill that stops it and no surgery that works. You wrap the worm around a stick and pull it out slowly, over days or weeks, inch by inch. If you rush, the worm breaks inside you and causes a fresh infection. Guinea worm is ancient. Preserved worms have been pulled out of Egyptian mummies from around 1000 BCE. The Ebers Papyrus, an Egyptian medical scroll from 1550 BCE, describes pulling the worm out with a stick. For three and a half thousand years, that was the best humans could do. Then in 1986, public health workers decided to kill the parasite off. They had no vaccine and no drug. What they had was cheap cloth water filters and a small army of volunteers willing to walk from village to village for decades. The plan was simple. Give everyone who drinks from a pond a cloth filter to strain out the tiny water fleas that spread the parasite. Then send volunteers walking house to house, year after year, teaching people how to use the filters and keeping anyone with an emerging worm out of the water. It worked. From 3.5 million cases a year to 10. Four were in Chad, four in Ethiopia, two in South Sudan. The other four countries where the worm used to be common, Angola, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, and Mali, had zero human cases for the second year in a row. The World Health Organization has already certified 200 countries as Guinea worm free. Six are left. The last hurdle is dogs. Cameroon had 445 infected animals last year and Chad had 147, so a lot of the remaining work is on animals, not humans. Strays get leashed, and crews treat ponds to kill any remaining worms. The campaign keeps watching until the number hits zero. When Guinea worm hits zero, it becomes the second human disease ever erased from the planet. The first was smallpox. It will also be the first parasite humans have ever wiped out, and the first disease ever ended without a single dose of medicine. Volunteers walked village to village with cloth filters for 40 years. Now a plague from the age of the pharaohs is about to be gone.

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daviss ๐Ÿ“ธ
daviss ๐Ÿ“ธ@davissยท
Not enough trains too many riders: "Rail ridership locally is surging. In fiscal year 2025, just under 200,000 travelers got on or off Amtrak trains at St. Paulโ€™s Union Depot. That marked a 58% increase over the previous fiscal year and was the highest ridership in the Twin Cities by far in the past 15 years." startribune.com/as-ridership-sโ€ฆ
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Chris ๐Ÿฆ
Chris ๐Ÿฆ@TrashPanda08xยท
@daviss Projected ridership for the Borealis was 125k, in its first fiscal year of service it served 215k riders.
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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
sam
sam@sam_d_1995ยท
here you go, only $11
sam tweet media
Charco@charcoded

hey @NYCMayor fix this please

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Natalie Holme Elsberg
Natalie Holme Elsberg@NatalieElsbergยท
@petersavodnik Politics and diplomacy were not going to rescue Israeli policy of wanton child murder and prison rape reported by Israelis themselves.
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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
MBTA
MBTA@MBTAยท
Taking the T to @BAA @BostonMarathon on April 20? Allow extra travel time & plan ahead with our #Boston130 travel guide, including: ๐Ÿš‡Service changes ๐Ÿ’ณPaying your fare, including @MBTA_CR's $10 holiday weekend pass for unlimited trips ๐Ÿ…ฟ๏ธParking ๐ŸฆบSafety โ„น๏ธmbta.com/marathon
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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
Hayden
Hayden@the_transit_guyยท
This system opened 21 years ago. The Red Line project that still hasnโ€™t broken ground in Baltimore started four years earlier.
Li Zexin ๆŽๆณฝๆฌฃ@XH_Lee23

Map of Chongqing's metro system in 3D. Chongqing is called the "mountain city". Building metro here is more difficult than in plain cities. Chongqingโ€™s metro total length ranks 7th in the world, with over 550 km.

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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ retweetou
Jarjoh ๐ŸŸฅ๐Ÿšฐ๐ŸŒ‡
Citibike e-bike rides are $0.27 per min AFTER the $239/ yr membership. That's bananas. The public ownership of Bluebikes keeps prices low and keeps our data off the Lyft app for pro-car marketing.
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MS8955
MS8955@ms8955aยท
@alanthefisher guess i was going more on vibes. Vegas is also a fumble in that sense?
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Ryan Pangrle
Ryan Pangrle@rpangrleยท
@alanthefisher @Nav2367 The cities and counties too! It's particularly bad in the Bay Area where (at least) 6 county governments with their own transit agencies, and two different regional agencies, all constantly bicker with each other. LA at least contains most of the metro in LA county.
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Kurriochi
Kurriochi@kurriochiยท
@alanthefisher could double deck highways save america? if not, could triple deck ones do it?
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Longyan Luu ๐Ÿ”ฐ๐ŸšŽ๐Ÿš…๐ŸŽ‹๐Ÿญ
@alanthefisher I think Salt Lake City gets a pass as much as Denver. 1 commuter rail, 3 light rail, 1 streetcar, and 89 bus routes. Daily ridership on the Wiki is at 136,000/day. Half of Denver RTD ridership, sure, but they are actively trying to expand which is great.
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