Telus outages and service status in Ennismore, Ontario
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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 Ennismore, Ontario
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Ennismore, 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 Ennismore, Ontario
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Ennismore and nearby locations:
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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.”
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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:
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Alex Blanchard (@Alexblanchard67) reported@JonFraserTF @TELUS I switched to @FreedomMobile for home and mobile last year. Cut my bill in half and don't pay roaming fees. The service has been the same as Rogers I had before. Highly recommend
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Fada (@dapsyfaj) reported@JonFraserTF @TELUS Canadian businesses suck on customer service , maybe because people have not learnt how to fight for their rights, they just vote silently with their feet. Sometimes you need to bang the table to reset their business brains
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Howard Macleod (@howard_macleod) reported@JonFraserTF @Nanceasaurus @TELUS I dumped Telus after 20 years of complete incompetence, went to Starlink and never looked back.
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Rick Hewat (@kidrickhewat) reported@JonFraserTF @TELUS The telecom business is in decline. They cannot easily raise prices given global trends and Cdn consumers seeing global pricing. I live rurally and pay the same rate as a customer in an urban area for lessor service as coverage is gone outside of town. Good luck with Bell!
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reportedMost of this map is noise to the average investor. But one name is quietly sitting on the layer everything else depends on, and almost nobody sees it. That name is $AMPG. The one that I think will do a parabolic move like $SIVE or $AAOI. Let me tell you the whole story. Look at where it sits: Connectivity & RF. The re-shored, certified domestic alternative for 5G, SATCOM and defense. One name in its lane. Here's why that lane is the one almost nobody is pricing correctly. Look at every other layer on this list. Photonics. Compute. Physical AI. Drones. Space. Energy. Every single one of them, at some point, has to move its signal somewhere. Data has to travel. And the layer that moves it through the air is RF, the radio. It's the connective tissue under the entire map. No radio, nothing else talks to anything. Now the problem that makes this a thesis and not just a product. America does not make its own radios. The companies that build the RF backbone of modern networks are all foreign: Nokia (Finland), Ericsson (Sweden), Samsung (Korea). The Chinese ones, Huawei and ZTE, are banned outright on national-security grounds. So the most powerful country on Earth, about to wire its economy, its defense and its AI into a wireless network, depends on other countries for the physical layer it runs on. That is a strategic vulnerability. Washington knows it. That's the gap $AMPG fills. AmpliTech is the only American company that designs and commercializes a 64T64R Massive MIMO O-RAN radio. That's the highest-capacity radio configuration in the modern stack, and it's the physical hardware that open AI-RAN runs on. Not the only one on Earth, Nokia and Ericsson make them too. The only American one. In a decade defined by re-shoring critical tech, that single word, American, is the whole point. And this isn't a pitch deck. It's already real. It's deployed at Telus, a Tier-1 North American carrier, running on live Open RAN sites alongside Samsung. It's a Strategic Partner in Open6G, the wireless hub funded by the US Department of Defense and run by Northeastern, sitting in the top partner tier right next to NVIDIA, Dell and Qualcomm. Its radio was the physical unit in the world's first open-source Massive MIMO AI-RAN demo, running with NVIDIA's Aerial software. And it was the only American-designed 64T64R radio to pass multi-vendor interoperability at the O-RAN ALLIANCE Global PlugFest. Then look at who shows up on its customer wall: NVIDIA, Amazon, IBM, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, L3Harris, NASA. You do not land defense primes by accident. Those relationships take years of qualification before you're even in the room. That's a moat you can't fake. Now the fundamentals, because a thesis needs a business under it. 48% gross margins, up from 33%. Debt-free. $50M revenue guidance for the year (and they hit their prior guide, they don't have a habit of underdelivering). And managament promised even more. Real backlog, real LOIs. This is a company that already makes money doing this, today, with the radio. And stacked on top, for free, two pieces of optionality. AI-RAN, where towers become intelligent edge nodes, the demo with NVIDIA points at exactly where this goes. And quantum, where AMPG makes the cryogenic amplifiers superconducting quantum computers need for qubit readout (it's delivered proof-of-concept units to names like IBM and Google). I'll be honest about both: optionality, not the core thesis. Cheap call options on top of a real business, not the reason to own it. Here's the honest framing that actually makes this stronger, not weaker. $AMPG is not a chokepoint nobody can replace. AI runs without it. Other radio makers exist. I won't pretend it's irreplaceable, because it isn't. What it is, is the sovereign alternative. The American option in a layer the US increasingly refuses to outsource That's a strategic preference backed by policy and funding, not a technical monopoly. And strategically favored can re-rate a sub-$1B company just as hard as technically indispensable can. And the timing isn't subtle. The US just restricted its most advanced AI models from all foreign nationals, even allies. When a country starts walling off its critical tech from its own friends, it tells you exactly how it's going to treat the physical layer its AI economy runs on. It's going to want that made at home. So in a map full of chokepoints and physical inputs, $AMPG is the layer that moves the signal, re-shored, certified, and American. The screens get the attention. The infrastructure gets the returns. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡
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lucy 🩷 FORTUNE’S WEAVE! (@diviinevoice) reportedHOW IS IT DOWN FOR SPECIFICALLY ALBERTANS WHO USE TELUS HOW ******** DOES THAT HAPPEN
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Ehrmantraut Capital (@EhrmantrautCap_) reportedAmpliTech Group $AMPG and an overview of its customers: Telus $T.TO - 5G/O-RAN. AmpliTech has already secured a multi-year LOI from Telus and purchase orders. Telus furthermore needs 30,000 AmpliTech radios for its O-RAN buildout until 2029. With each unit costing atleast $10,000, you're looking at a minimum $300 million cumulative revenue until 2029, excluding service/maintenance/installation fees that AmpliTech can charge to Telus. $NVDA, Northeastern University - AI-RAN. Both $NVDA and $AMPG are part of the Open6G project at Northeastern University (supported by the US government), and it is likely that $NVDA is interested in $AMPG's proprietary O-RAN CAT B 64T64R Massive MIMO radio unit, which sends out signals based on NVIDIA AI Aerial's AI-driven calculations (running on Blackwell or Grace Hopper GPUs). $IBM, $AMZN - cryogenic LNAs for quantum. Quantum computers store info in qubits at a temperature of 4 Kelvin (-269 degrees Celsius), these give off very weak signals that need to be amplified without creating any noise. AmpliTech has cryogenic LNAs that can withstand these temperatures. $BA, $NOC, $LMT, US Air Force - LNAs for defense for the purpose of communications, radar and electronic warfare. AmpliTech has military-grade LNAs, that have passed years of qualifications and are fully produced in the US, an important requirement. NASA, $VSAT, $WBD, Paramount - SATCOM/satellite communications equipment. AmpliTech sells LNAs that allow LEO satellites and ground stations to pick up very weak signals and translate them into useful data. They also sell PAs (Power Amplifiers) that allow LEO sats to send signals across large distances. Rarely do you see a microcap with such an impressive list of customers. Below, a complete overview of AmpliTech's customers can be seen, which includes more than just the ones I mentioned above (picture is from @rk8215).
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Clifford Mathew (@cliffmathew) reported@JonFraserTF @TELUS Isn't Bell and Telus the same network? I have been milked by @Rogers for multiple years before I wised up and switched to Bell. 400+ dollars down to 200+, and much more data.
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The Hanging Jowl (@TheHangingJowl) reported@JonFraserTF @TELUS Problem is, they're all the same.
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Colin Regan 🚀 (@engalicorn) reported@JonFraserTF @TELUS Yeah my experience last month with them was brutal. Activated international roaming online no other option. Turns out Seattle isn't international. $100 worth of roaming fees before I even left the airport @ $5/mb They text me "Text ROAM" to activate timing. "How embarrassing there's been an error" 2 hrs with tech support no solution. Bought $25 dollar esim online. Unlimited data for 5 days. 1/5 the cost of Telus Roaming plan that I can't add. Now I know.