Telus outages and service status in Balgonie, Saskatchewan
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Telus offers phone, internet and television services, as well as mobile phone and mobile internet service through Telus Mobility. Telus internet service uses DSL technology. Telus TV relies on satellite or internet television (IPTV). Telus' mobile phone network supports CMS, HSPA and LTE.
Problems in the last 24 hours in Balgonie, Saskatchewan
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Balgonie, Saskatchewan and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
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Community Discussion
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Telus Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reportedSmall ask, but it matters more than you'd think. 👇 Drop a comment under the post I'm quoting (not this one), telling people what grabs YOU the most about $AMPG. The only US-made 64T64R radio? The cryogenic quantum angle? NVIDIA in the Open6G demo? The $2-to-founder story? Telus already deploying? Whatever it is for you, say it. Here's why this little gesture counts: engagement is what pushes a post in front of new eyes. Every comment, every reply, puts this company in front of someone who's never heard of it. That's how a story most people are sleeping on finally gets seen. We're not a paid promo. We're not a fund. We're just a group of people who did the work, believe in something real, and want others to at least get the chance to look. So take ten seconds. Comment what stands out to you. Help the signal travel. This is how the little guys get heard. 🤝 Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR.
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Kevin miller (@originalkmiller) reported@Skyla_SkyDancer @RiseOfAlberta Will telcos not want Alberta consumers? They'll cut us off because ... why? But sure. Let's imagine that Bell, Rogers, and Telus all cut off their service for some random reason. I guess there's always Starlink until the US telcos fill the gap or we develop our own telcos. The same can be said for power. Most Alberta power is generated in Alberta. I guess companies could decide to shut down, but why? And their equipment would still be here, and the natural gas. The new gov't could step in and operate them. Cutting off Alberta would cause trouble for the electricity grid, so it is unlikely to happen unless we are at war. Do you think we'd separate without having a transition plan for key infrastructure? Most peaceful separations have those. We'd be foolish not to have that ready and signed. Even if Canada is super angry and refuses to sign or negotiate at all, the US would have no reason to cut us off. Finally, 16 countries use the US dollar. It isn't ideal because we don't set monetary policy. Same would be true of Canadian dollar. But, we don't manage monetary policy now. Canada spends like drunken sailors and prints money to give all over rhe world. We have no control now. At least when we are independent eventually we can develop our own currency. But not right away. Are these really the best scare tactics you have? I think if you work at it you can come up with some valid concerns instead of these strawmen.
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Olyth (@olyth_terminal) reportedJust a little perspective here for $AMPG potential revenue through 2029. 🔮TELUS Open RAN Rollout AmpliTech Equipment Summary Planned Sites: 5,000 macro cell sites across Canada AmpliTech Equipment per Sector: 2 FDD mid-band radios Sectors per Site: 3 (standard three-sector macro tower configuration) Radios per Site: 6 (2 radios × 3 sectors) Total AmpliTech Radios Required: 30,000 (6 radios × 5,000 sites) Target Completion: 2029Revenue 💸 Estimates for AmpliTech These are approximate industry-based estimates for similar Open RAN FDD mid-band radios (pricing is not publicly disclosed and varies with volume discounts, contracts, features, and bundling). Price per Radio (USD) Total Estimated Revenue (30,000 radios) $10,000 = $300 million $15,000 = $450 million $20,000 = $600 million $25,000 = $750 million Realistic Range: $300M – $750M total potential revenue for AmpliTech from the full rollout (before costs, margins, installation, software, or support). AmpliTech has already secured multi-million dollar POs and LOIs related to TELUS, but the full 30,000-unit rollout will be phased through 2029. Revenue could also include additional products (antennas, services, etc.) beyond just the radios.
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EarnCatalyst (@EarnCatalyst) reported@UnkleHack69 The problem is that the Canadian market is extremely protectionist of Telus and Rogers. It's not even like telecommunications regulations are more strict in Canada and US telecoms just refuse to meet them because they're actually much more lenient than in the US.
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DemonicAngelAlan 🇨🇦 🏳️🌈 (@Alan_Demonic) reported@wongkarwasian The amount of people I still find paying $100+ for like 2gb on Telus because they just pay the bill and move on sucks SO MUCH but I feel so glad when I find them and can get them moved for something better
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Mardo (@MardoResearch) reported$AMPG is moving because investors are realizing this may be more than a small telecom parts company. The simple bull case: AMPG makes radio equipment used in Open RAN networks. Open RAN lets telecom companies build 5G networks using equipment from multiple vendors instead of relying only on giants like Ericsson, Nokia, Samsung, or Huawei. That matters because TELUS, one of Canada’s largest telecom companies, is rolling out Open RAN across Canada — and AMPG appears to be one of the smaller vendors getting real equipment into that network. According to industry reports, TELUS Open RAN sites use AMPG radios alongside Samsung equipment, with AMPG providing two FDD mid-band radios per sector. A normal macro tower has three sectors, which implies six AMPG radios per site. So the upside math is what has investors excited: If TELUS eventually deploys AMPG equipment across 5,000 sites, that could mean roughly 30,000 radios. At an estimated $10,000–$25,000 per radio, that creates a rough potential revenue range of $300 million to $750 million over time (compared to current annualized revenue of around $21 million). That is not official company guidance, and pricing/volumes are not confirmed. But for a company with a small market cap, even a portion of that opportunity could be very meaningful. The stock is going up because investors are betting AMPG could turn from a niche RF components company into a real supplier for the next wave of 5G, Open RAN, and AI-connected telecom infrastructure. Disclosure: I'm long, and already up +40% after reviewing @rk8215's deep dive. Credit also goes to @olyth_terminal fore recent analysis.
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Paula the swiftie mom🩷.TAYRONTON5 (@irishdancergirl) reportedWhy is it so hard to speak to a human at @TELUS @TELUSsupport . How does a business not have a customer support phone number listed on their website . So frustrated . Just want to cancel my services now. So annoyed !!!!
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The Tweet Chewbacca 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇬🇱 (@Chewbaccafan) reported@TELUS you will never get my business back. Abominable.
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Yemi the Addicted Programmer 🇳🇬 & 🇨🇦 (@yemitula) reported@Highteaspeaks @Bell Never use the top tier provider unless they're giving you some sort of sweet deal. Use second tier Rogers? Use Fido. Bell? Use Virgin Telus? Koodo Same network, lower rates
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CrudeBoi (@CrudeBoi67420) reported@bilal_akh @rory_mg Loll i do not use them due my jobs requiring constant travel out of city limits. Doesn’t matter tho, it’s still a crap service for working out of cities. Telus has crap coverage also, reason why freedom coverage suffers. Yes it may be cheap but quality is quite low. Quality over quantity imo Rogers/Bell/Fido are superior services in Canada.