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Telus

Telus outages and service status in Kirkland, Quebec

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Kirkland, 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 Kirkland, Quebec

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Kirkland, Quebec 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 Kirkland, Quebec

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

  • Trumpismme
    Politics, Sports (@Trumpismme) reported from Dollard-Des Ormeaux, Quebec

    As usual Ezra's in the money. If i were a telus customer of be changing companies asap.

Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • PsudoMike
    PsudoMike πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ (@PsudoMike) reported

    @KerrGordon Not typically β€” SIM cards are separate from the device. The phone connects to the network via the SIM (or eSIM). Telus framing it as hardware doesn't change that it's a mandatory access fee.

  • chinoalemano
    ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported

    Why do I compare $AMPG ($0.2B) to $KEEL ($3.5B), $DGXX ($0.6B) and $NBIS ($66B)? Fair question. And the answer is bigger than people think, because AMPG isn't just in the same trend as these. It's actually more diversified than any of them. Let me explain properly. Start with what they share. They're all plays on the same thing: the physical infrastructure of the AI era. Not the models, not the apps. The actual hardware and buildout AI runs on. That's the layer that quietly captures the money while everyone argues about chatbots. $NBIS, $KEEL and $DGXX are neoclouds. They sell AI compute out of data centers. You need somewhere to run all this AI, so they build and rent the GPU infrastructure. Picks and shovels for the cloud side. Here's how I think about $AMPG: same idea, but on the tower instead of the data center. That's what AI-RAN means. The cell tower stops being a dumb relay and becomes an intelligent edge node, computing AI right where the data is created, in real time, because some decisions can't wait for a round-trip to a distant data center. And the tower can't do any of it without a radio. AMPG makes the only American 64T64R Massive MIMO radio that open AI-RAN runs on. If a neocloud is the physical layer of cloud AI, AMPG is the physical layer of edge AI. Honest framing: today a neocloud sells recurring compute and AMPG sells radio hardware, so the analogy is about where this is heading, the tower as the next edge data center, not a claim it's already an identical business. Same megatrend, earlier in its arc. But here's where AMPG actually pulls ahead of a pure neocloud play. It isn't a one-trick bet. While the neoclouds live or die on a single thesis, AMPG has multiple real legs underneath it. βœ… Zero debt. βœ… $20M cash. βœ… $200M market cap. βœ… 48% gross margins. ➟ Leg 1, the revenue engine that exists right now: Telus. AMPG's radio is already deployed at a Tier-1 carrier, and on the last call the COO said they "continue to receive orders against that LOI" and projected Q2 "definitely much higher than Q1.". That's real, recurring, shipping revenue. A lot of these pure AI-infra names are still pre-revenue or burning cash. AMPG is selling product today at 48% gross margins. ➟ Leg 2, space. AMPG makes the low-noise amplifiers that are the "ears" of satellites. It shipped prototypes to a "Fortune 50 satellite systems provider" building a LEO constellation, and the only Fortune 50 doing that is Amazon with Kuiper, which then showed up on AMPG's customer wall. (Honest framing: the wall confirms Amazon as a customer, the LEO link is my deduction, not a disclosed deal.) With SpaceX now public, the whole space sector just got validated, and AMPG is the picks-and-shovels under it. ➟ Leg 3, quantum. AMPG makes the cryogenic amplifiers superconducting quantum computers need for qubit readout, with proof-of-concept units shipped to names like IBM and Google. Optionality, not revenue yet, but real and patented and American. ➟ Leg 4, defense. Lockheed, Northrop, L3Harris, Boeing, NASA on the customer wall. Relationships that take years of qualification to earn. So put it together. AMPG is in the exact same AI-infrastructure megatrend everyone loves the neoclouds for, except it also has real shipping revenue, a Tier-1 carrier ramping, space exposure, quantum optionality, and a defense business, all at a sub-$1B cap, debt-free, with 48% margins. That's the part that breaks the lazy argument. When someone says AMPG "already ran 135%" while cheering NBIS or DGXX up 160-190%, they're judging it by the chart, not the thesis. And on the thesis, AMPG isn't behind these names. It's the same trade, with more legs, earlier, and cheaper. They picked the data center. I'm adding the tower. And the tower happens to also touch space, quantum and defense. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. πŸ“‘

  • lkn4chnge
    Bill Tansey (@lkn4chnge) reported

    @jodyvance @TELUS Anybody that allows Telus to abuse them the way their customer service is have to much money or no self pride, it’s disgusting

  • bomberfish77
    bomberfish (@bomberfish77) reported

    @AliceInDisarray @egalbraith_ @N104AP only half true! telus offered it on their cdma network

  • everyeverysec
    np (@everyeverysec) reported

    Telus is an evil empire and deserves to be cut down instead of expanded

  • QuikInsightz
    QuikInsightz (@QuikInsightz) reported

    🚨 #BREAKING: $ASTS Successfully Launched BlueBirds 8, 9, and 10, Completing Its First Multi-Satellite Launch Since April's Setback. What happened: ➜ AST SpaceMobile confirmed the successful launch of BlueBirds 8, 9, and 10 at 2:39 a.m. EDT on June 17, 2026. ➜ The satellites were launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. ➜ This marks the company's first successful stacked multi-satellite launch since April's mission setback. ➜ Each BlueBird satellite carries a phased array antenna measuring approximately 2,400 square feet, which AST SpaceMobile says is the largest commercial communications array ever deployed in low Earth orbit. ➜ The satellites are designed to connect directly to standard, unmodified smartphones without requiring any special hardware. ➜ AST SpaceMobile says the new satellites are capable of delivering peak download speeds of nearly 200 Mbps for voice, broadband data, and video services. ➜ That is nearly double the company's previously demonstrated peak speed of 98.9 Mbps achieved by its earlier Block 1 satellites. What comes next: ➜ CEO Abel Avellan said BlueBirds 11, 12, and 13 will ship shortly ahead of the company's next launch. ➜ He also said next-generation satellites through BlueBird 37 are already in active production and assembly. ➜ Avellan said, "This first stacked launch is just the beginning. Our focus is firmly on execution: scaling launch cadence, manufacturing, and preparing for commercial service." ➜ Speaking about the mission, he added: "BlueBirds 8, 9, and 10 represent the continued execution of a vision once considered impossible: space-based cellular broadband to everyone, everywhere." The scale behind the company: ➜ AST SpaceMobile says it now operates more than 500,000 square feet of manufacturing and operations facilities worldwide. ➜ The company says it employs more than 2,250 people and has a portfolio of more than 3,900 patents and pending patent claims. ➜ AST SpaceMobile also says it has agreements with nearly 60 mobile network operators representing more than 3 billion subscribers worldwide. ➜ Its strategic partners include $T, $VZ, Vodafone, Rakuten, Google, Bell, Telus, stc Group, and American Tower. ➜ The company plans to initially activate commercial service in the United States, Canada, Europe, Saudi Arabia, and Japan, while also supporting U.S. government programs.

  • BcTall
    BCTallTrees (@BcTall) reported

    @Angelahvn They installed Telus fiber here but it still has very SLOW periods. I'm still trying to figure it out (there's some online guidance on using a separate router downstream of the one Telus provides, for one)

  • JoelDeTeves
    Joel - coffee/acc (@JoelDeTeves) reported

    He's right, but letting Cohere and Telus grift taxpayers isn't going to fix it

  • BrittsMagee
    ♑2rittsMagee♑ (@BrittsMagee) reported

    I am the most excited girl every right now!! I had to go to Telus in Londonderry and as I was waiting for a phone call from customer service I went to the candy shop next door called Showcase and OMG😱 I wanted to order some months ago online but the shipping is more than the candy so I gave up on ever trying these!! They have so many flavors too!!

  • Rick19053470
    Rick (@Rick19053470) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Yikes!! I just moved to Telus from Shaw/Rogers to get much lower rates and fibre-optic service.