Bomb blasts in Bangalore: A summary and thoughts on communication infrastructure
There were 7 bomb blasts (602 pm update: 8 blasts) from 120 pm to 235 in Bangalore: Madiwala, Mysore Road, Audogodi, Koramangala, Vittal Mallya Road, Nayandanahalli
and Richmond Road (Shivaji nagar).
2 people died and 4 were injured. (Updated at 545 pm local time - 1 person is claimed dead and 6 injured)
They were fairly small blasts apparently meant to cause panic and fear.
I found out about this from twitter 3 minutes after the blast and since then have been twittering with what information I have available.
Nearly 2 hours after the blast the city pretty much shutdown. Offices closed and everyone was asked to go home. Since nothing of this ever happened in Bangalore before, everyone pretty much panicked.
(Updated at 545 pm local time - Bangalore is returning to normal with traffic worse than usual at the locations of the blast). People are returning to normal and the panic seems to have settled down.
Since two of the blasts were nearly telecom posts, mobile communication was shut down for voice.
Text message (SMS) services were working fine. Calls to US (I called my sister and others) were working fine. Local calls were unable to go through.
All roads leading to and from the main downtown area (M. G. Road) were pretty much closed.
A perspective:
1. For communication: the Internet rocks in India - twitter stayed pretty much stable throughout.
2. Text message beats voice calls during emergency.
3. Local news providers were absolutely useless in getting information out. There was more nonsense and speculation on the motive and the reason for the blasts than real facts. Television did work, but it was useless information that was being transmitted.
They were fairly small blasts apparently meant to cause panic and fear.
I found out about this from twitter 3 minutes after the blast and since then have been twittering with what information I have available.
Nearly 2 hours after the blast the city pretty much shutdown. Offices closed and everyone was asked to go home. Since nothing of this ever happened in Bangalore before, everyone pretty much panicked.
(Updated at 545 pm local time - Bangalore is returning to normal with traffic worse than usual at the locations of the blast). People are returning to normal and the panic seems to have settled down.
Since two of the blasts were nearly telecom posts, mobile communication was shut down for voice.
Text message (SMS) services were working fine. Calls to US (I called my sister and others) were working fine. Local calls were unable to go through.
All roads leading to and from the main downtown area (M. G. Road) were pretty much closed.
A perspective:
1. For communication: the Internet rocks in India - twitter stayed pretty much stable throughout.
2. Text message beats voice calls during emergency.
3. Local news providers were absolutely useless in getting information out. There was more nonsense and speculation on the motive and the reason for the blasts than real facts. Television did work, but it was useless information that was being transmitted.




That was quick.
@bangaloremirror broke the news on twitter before rediff!
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I've been reading you on Twitter from Springfield, Illinois, USA. Good luck and be safe.
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Thanks Marie. Appreciate the note.
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Thanks for the updates on Twitter & this blog post (forwarded to my friends not on twitter). Glad to hear you are okay and I hope that the situation does not get worse.
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Thanks for the thoughts Suki.
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Ironic that one could make international calls but not local ones. I remember someone cracking a joke about something like that in a Hindi movie (probably 20 years ago at least).
Glad to hear not much real damage done.
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The main reason I could make international calls is thanks to the Internet (my connectivity was great) and MagicJack. Local telephone providers were awful, but Magic Jack saved the day.
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