Telus outages and service status in Canora, Saskatchewan
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- Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Canora, including 0 direct reports.
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 Canora, Saskatchewan
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Canora, 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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Alison (@alialison54321) reported@garymasonglobe @TELUS Telus is the worst.
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Torina (@Torina1036429) reportedWhat do people do with a Telus contract when they move and don’t have a new house to go to yet? So frustrating!! @TELUSsupport @TELUS been a customer for years…if I have to pay a huge fee then my relationship with Telus is Over!!
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reportedEveryone's focused on $AMPG's US story. And fair enough, they're expanding fast across America. The only American 64T64R AI-RAN radio, deployed at Telus, a Strategic Partner in the DoD-funded Open6G hub next to $NVDA and $QCOM, and the CEO just said new major carriers may go straight to POs next quarter. The US story alone is plenty. But here's what almost nobody is connecting: it was never going to stop at America. On the last earnings call, CEO Fawad Maqbool pointed somewhere else entirely: "Our success being the largest O-RAN deployment in America is helping us reach out and reach further into Europe and other areas of the world". That's the strategy in one sentence. Win the flagship at home, then use that credibility as a passport into other markets. And it isn't just talk. The groundwork is already there. Receipt 1, the concrete one: AMPG signed a 5-year supplier agreement with Fujitsu Spain back in October 2024, explicitly expanding its reach across Europe, Africa and the Middle East. So when the CEO says "Europe," there's already a signed, multi-year channel underneath the words. Receipt 2 is hiding in plain sight: the United Kingdom. Look at AmpliTech's customer wall and you'll find Digital Catapult. Most people scroll right past it. But Digital Catapult isn't a random logo. It's a UK government-backed innovation organization, funded through Innovate UK and DSIT (the UK's Department for Science, Innovation and Technology). And it runs SONIC Labs, the country's flagship Open RAN testing facility. Here's where AMPG enters. Its 64T64R Massive MIMO radio was tested at the O-RAN Global PlugFest in London, hosted at SONIC Labs, with HTC's G-REIGN providing the DU/CU stack and AmpliTech bringing the radio. The only American radio in the room, validated inside a UK government-funded laboratory. Now the part that makes it interesting. Who advises SONIC Labs? All four of Britain's major operators: EE/BT, Three, Virgin Media O2 and Vodafone UK. They sit on its advisory board, shaping what they need from Open RAN vendors and acting as potential future buyers of the vendors who pass through. So picture it. AMPG's radio validated in a government-backed UK lab, whose advisory board is a who's-who of every major British carrier. The entire UK Open RAN buying ecosystem, in one room, watching the only American radio perform. Now let me be completely honest, because that's the only way this is worth anything. There is no signed UK contract. The British operators advise SONIC Labs, they do not own it, and they haven't bought anything from AMPG yet. This was a product-validation milestone, not a revenue event. Anyone telling you the UK government or a British carrier is about to hand AMPG a deal is getting ahead of the facts. A foot in the door is not a sale. But here's why it matters AMPG keeps showing up in exactly the rooms that matter. The US DoD-funded Open6G hub. The O-RAN Global PlugFest as the only American 64T64R radio to pass. A signed channel into Europe via Fujitsu Spain. And now a UK government-backed lab advised by every major British operator. And the CEO saying they'll expand to Europe. That's the pattern. The same playbook, repeated across the Western world: get the only American radio validated, get it in front of the buyers, and let the sovereignty tailwind do the rest. One market at a time. This isn't a company waiting to be discovered. It's methodically getting itself in front of every major Open RAN buyer in the US and Europe, one validation at a time. The contracts are the next step, not the first one. A foot in the door isn't a deal. But you never get the deal without it first. And AMPG's foot is now in a lot of very important doors. Still sub-$1B while all of this quietly compounds. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported@DVLT146025 This is exactly it, and it's the most underrated skill in this whole game. A manipulated pump and a real multibagger look identical on the chart. Same vertical candles, same volume spike, same "it already ran too much" comments. The chart literally cannot tell you which one you're holding. The only thing that separates them is what's underneath. A pump has a story and nothing behind it. A multibagger has a chart that's finally catching up to a business that was already real. And that's the work most people skip. They argue about the candle instead of reading the filings. With $AMPG, the difference shows up the moment you actually dig in. 48% gross margins, up from 33%. Debt-free. Revenue growing triple digits. The only American 64T64R AI-RAN radio, deployed at Telus, a Strategic Partner in a DoD-funded hub. Defense primes and NASA as customers. A CEO guiding margins higher because the heavy investment is behind them. None of that is chart noise. That's a company. A manipulated stock can't survive due diligence. It falls apart the second you look closely. AMPG gets stronger the closer you look. That's the whole tell. The people scared off by "it already moved" never opened the hood. The ones who did know exactly which category this is. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡
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Gary Mason 🇨🇦🇺🇦 (@garymasonglobe) reportedHi @TELUS I am happy to report that someone from your team called and we sorted the problem out over the phone with the help of a video link. Fingers crossed, issue resolved.
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D.Connors (@dvconnors5) reportedA friend was workin' for a telephone company for a bit there,said he called up a customer one time,"Hi,this is Frank from Telus calling for a Ms.B.Licker or Liker? Something about an outstanding bill of...
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Ehrmantraut Capital (@EhrmantrautCap_) reportedO-RAN is the future, and AmpliTech Group $AMPG is well-positioned to become a massive winner in it. The market TAM of O-RAN was only $2.8 billion in 2024, but is expected to grow rapidly to $48 billion by 2035, implying a CAGR of almost 30% from 2024 to 2035. $AMPG's proprietary Massive MIMO 64T64R O-RAN radios and best of the industry LNAs are of importance for the O-RAN buildout. We already know from the Telus article that they will need 30,000 AmpliTech radios for their O-RAN buildout until 2029, which could generate a cumulative revenue of atleast $300 million for $AMPG until 2029 (excluding service, installation and maintenance fees that AmpliTech can charge). CEO Maqbool stated in the last earnings call that new purchase orders will be announced in the next couple of months from multiple major MNOs. Traditional RAN is fading and O-RAN is gaining momentum. $AMPG is ready for the structural change.
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WhatDoIKnow (@WhatDoIKnoow) reported@TELUS Tell your canvas people to not be so damn rude when you tell them you are not interested. I said no thank you 5 times and he swore in punjabi as he walked away. I know what he said.
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MRD (@MRD87694463) reported@NewhavenPM @tsxman @zethuscap Infinitely into the future. Haaaa Yes needs repairs only 3 months after it's poorly installed. Telus can't answered the phone when customers don't have service, and schedules call backs 3 days to then book said repairs. Dead company walking.
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Stewy 75 (@stewy75) reported.@TELUSBusiness promised TMC customers a “seamless” transition. That hasn’t been our experience. Today our business alarm stopped working. After hours on the phone, multiple transfers, and repeating our story over and over, we were told our account had been closed for “missed payment.” We have 15 TELUS Business Mobility lines, multiple TELUS security accounts, every account is on pre-authorized payments, and we’ve never missed a payment. Our other security accounts are still there. Our be business account has simply disappeared. A business shouldn’t be left without alarm monitoring because of what appears to be an account migration error. Someone at TELUS needs to take ownership and make this right.