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Telus outages and service status in Cavan, Ontario

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Cavan, 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 Cavan, Ontario

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Cavan, Ontario and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

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Telus Issues Reports Near Cavan, Ontario

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Cavan and nearby locations:

  • joshuachalhoub
    Joshua Joey Chalhoub (@joshuachalhoub) reported from Peterborough, Ontario

    @TELUS @TELUSsupport There’s nothing more satisfying than calling your customer contact service centre and being told your wait time is over an hour - regardless of time or day. Now that’s service. “Let’s make your experience a horrible one. The future is not friendly.”

  • dboyceMD
    Debra BoyceMD (@dboyceMD) reported from Peterborough, Ontario

    @scottontario @TELUS @TELUSsupport @Bell @Bell_Support @virginmobilecan @koodo I just heard @CBCOntMorning they could not connect by phone for an interview in #ptbo No service with @TELUS

Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • jaymack319
    Jay mack (@jaymack319) reported

    @koodo @TELUSsupport @TELUS please explain what the point of having cell phones on your network is ? Whenever we have a power outage, your network is nonexistent. Your competitors were slightly slower, but still running fine. Looks like we need to shop them.

  • Temple_Eight
    Temple 8 Research (@Temple_Eight) reported

    I hope the $ASTS boys like dilution because you're going to need a lot of it to fund your ambitions. While ASTS has a small lead on broadband connectivity their real advantage is spectrum access via carrier exclusivity and they've locked up nearly 60 mobile network operator partners covering over 3 billion subscribers AT&T, Verizon, Vodafone, Rakuten, Telus, Bell, etc. SpaceX operates more than 9,000 satellites around 60% of everything in orbit. ASTS has roughly 9 including recent launches, and is trying to accelerate to about one launch a month to hit 2026 targets. Analysts are skeptical it can sustain this. Each BlueBird Block 2 is a 6,100 kg spacecraft, far more complex and expensive per unit than a Starlink satellite and AST can't launch anything close to the pace of Musk. SpaceX owns the rockets while ASTS has to buy rides on Falcon 9, New Glenn, etc. SpaceX's hardware iteration speed is, as one analysis put it, a real and durable advantage, and if their next gen satellites deliver on data performance, the competitive gap narrows while the constellation scale gap stays insurmountable. SpaceX already took the biggest carrier prize in the US being T-Mobile. So the carrier moat cuts both ways. SpaceX obviously has access to vast capital after IPO, with Starlink generating ~$10.4 billion of revenue in 2025. ASTS is pre-real-revenue at scale ($70.9 million in 2025) and funding itself with convertible debt and dilution. Do the bulls have an answer to this?

  • AbdiAfrah
    A-Dub (@AbdiAfrah) reported

    @TELUS what’s the point in referring a friend for $50 credit if you guys take the friend and don’t give me the credit. Make it make sense don’t promise something during a recession economy and take it back because of your slow SIM card delivery service

  • McSwagg3r4
    mc sw@gs (@McSwagg3r4) reported

    @Apple & @TELUS … Why do I pay thousands for your phones, and hundreds per month to get the worst service in the world? My US phone is $30/month and has like $0 dead spots. I’m going to badger my MP & MLA

  • chooseyourwow
    Mark Lines (@chooseyourwow) reported

    Telus is the only losing position in my portfolio. But it is down big almost $200k. So what to do? I little story if I may… In 2009, in the financial crisis, $BMO was down 50% and dividend 10%. I remember at the time I went to a branch for a meeting with an account manager about some business matter…

  • TimConnoll56040
    Tim Connolly (@TimConnoll56040) reported

    @garymasonglobe @TELUS LOL to bad your TDS is so bad Starlink is pretty good

  • GeraldKrook27
    Gerald Andrew Krook (@GeraldKrook27) reported

    Canadians 🇨🇦 if you subscribe to Roger's. Have an internet or cell phone plan Cancel it. Change providers. This is required as a statement against the removal of Hockey Night in Canada 🇨🇦 Roger's doesn't care about tradition or you. Just profits. BELL AND TELUS ARE BETTER OPTIONS

  • chinoalemano
    ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported

    Was it too late to buy $AXTI or $SIVE at $30, after they'd already run 600%? The answer is obvious: no, it wasn't. The people who stayed out "because it had already gone up too much" missed most of the move. Lately people ask me "Is it too late to buy $AMPG"? I haven't sold a single share. And that alone answers the question. Because if I truly believed it was too late to buy, what I'd really be telling you is that it's time to sell. They're the same sentence with a different face. "Too late to buy" and "time to sell" mean exactly the same thing. And I'm not selling. So I can't tell you it's too late without my own actions calling me a liar. Here's what people get backwards. "Late" and "early" feel like they're about the price. About the chart. About whether you caught the move or missed it. They're not. Not for a company at this stage. It comes down to one thing only: whether you trust what the company actually is. Think about AXTI and SIVE. The people who sold or never entered "because it had already run 600%" were staring at the chart, not the business. The ones who held or bought were looking at the thesis. If you trusted the company, $30 was just a stop on a much longer road. If you didn't, you thought it was late, and you'd have thought it was late at any price. Because that's the trap: if you don't trust the company, it was late at $3, it's late at $8, and it'll still feel late at $20. The chart was never your real question. Your real question was always whether you believed in it, just disguised as "timing". So instead of asking me about timing, ask yourself whether you believe the thesis. Let me tell you why I do. This is the only American company commercializing the 64T64R AI-RAN radio, the physical hardware the open AI-RAN future runs on. It's already deployed at Telus, a Tier-1 carrier. It's a Strategic Partner in the DoD-funded Open6G hub, in the top tier next to NVIDIA, Dell and Qualcomm, with its radio already tested alongside NVIDIA's Aerial software. That's not a meme. That's a real position in a layer the US is actively trying to re-shore for national security. Underneath that sits a real business: 48% gross margins, debt-free, revenue growing fast, defense primes and NASA on the customer wall. And stacked on top, for free, genuine optionality in quantum and in space. The kind of upside you don't even pay for at this valuation. I won't insult you by pretending it's risk-free. It isn't. There's customer concentration, there's dilution, there's execution risk. I've said all of it openly. A company is never a sure thing. But "is it too late" was never the question that matters. The question that matters is this: do you understand this company well enough to hold it through the noise, the FUD, the red days, and the people screaming that you're late? Because that conviction is the only thing that decides whether you actually capture the story or get shaken out halfway. So here's my honest answer, the one I can stand behind: It's late if you don't trust the company. It's early if you do. And the only person who can answer which one you are is you. Do the work. Read the filings. Build your own conviction, or don't. But don't outsource it to a chart, and don't outsource it to me. I just know which side I'm on. And I haven't sold a share. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡

  • PadDawg
    ThePodDog (@PadDawg) reported

    Hey People don't ever get a 3rd party like Telus to have control over things like your heating and air conditioning. I put in for a cancelation of service for the end of the month and I thought it was on good terms. Wrong. They shut everything down 2 hours later. No warning

  • Aluminumovercst
    Jambon radio (@Aluminumovercst) reported

    @Eggs_and_Jakey Telus is who we use in bc Although their customer service and no paper billing drives me absolutely mad. Seems to be the lesser of the evils imo