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Telus outages and service status in McLaren's Beach, Ontario

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around McLaren's Beach, 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 McLaren's Beach, Ontario

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in McLaren's Beach, 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

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • revtvcanada
    REV TV Canada (@revtvcanada) reported

    @frozenmustache Appears to be an issue localized to Rogers and Telus customers. We apologize for the inconvenience.

  • youngster1015
    Bobby (@youngster1015) reported

    @truthte52543233 @SchislerCole Bell down 30% even after an unprecedented dividend cut and Telus down 40% and can barely pay their annual 15% dividend yield. Sounds like rogers is doing waaaaaaaay better than bell and Telus combined in a tough industry

  • _Cole_Smith
    Cole Smith (@_Cole_Smith) reported

    @JimmyJDMitchell @Sportsnet Telus is in the middle of installing new internet lines in my neighbourhood. They can't finish soon enough so I can cancel my Rogers/Shaw account...

  • peterli34923561
    Rich Peter (@peterli34923561) reported

    $ASTS --- Japan’s government plans to issue up to ¥1.48 trillion (approximately $912 million) in large-scale public subsidies for a satellite communications project led by Rakuten. Rakuten is a core early investor and strategic partner of ASTS. The two firms are advancing a joint venture (JV) in Japan to secure full regulatory approvals for commercial direct-to-device (D2D) operations. This government subsidy effectively covers ASTS’s Asia network deployment costs head-on, drastically easing market concerns over the company’s cash burn trajectory. The firm successfully launched BlueBirds 8, 9 and 10 in mid-June 2026, and all three satellites are operating smoothly in orbit. Shortly after, ASTS officially announced plans to deploy BlueBirds 11, 12 and 13 in early August 2026. Why the August Launch Matters This batch will carry ultra-large antenna arrays spanning 2,400 square feet. ASTS previously hit a peak download speed of 98.9 Mbps on unmodified consumer smartphones via satellite connectivity; the new August satellites are projected to double this maximum throughput. 1. The World’s First Truly Gap-Free Cellular Network Legacy satellite communications systems including Iridium and early Starlink require custom antennas, ground terminals or dedicated satellite handsets. $ASTS ’s proprietary technology enables billions of existing unmodified 4G/5G smartphones worldwide to connect directly to orbital satellites. The innovation instantly erases all terrestrial coverage dead zones across oceans, deserts and mountainous terrain. 2. Landlord-Style Model Locked In With Global Telecom Giants $ASTS does not compete for end users against carriers like T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon — instead, it acts as their critical infrastructure ally. The company has executed binding commercial agreements with top-tier global operators: AT&T, Verizon, Japan’s Rakuten, Canada’s Telus and more. These carriers willingly share revenue with ASTS to deliver seamless connectivity to subscribers operating in off-grid regions. This business model pushes customer acquisition costs (CAC) nearly to zero, and will generate massive high-margin recurring cash flow once the full satellite constellation is operational. 3. Ample Cash Runway to Alleviate Cash-Burn Skepticism As of the latest quarterly filing, the company holds $3.5 billion in cash on its balance sheet versus only around $2.9 billion in long-term debt. This robust liquidity provides unconstrained capital to ramp launch contracts and satellite manufacturing through 2026–2027, eliminating near-term risks of dilutive equity offerings or distressed asset sales. Management’s official guidance pins full-year 2026 revenue between $150 million and $200 million, with revenue poised to approach $1 billion in 2027 as the network activates commercially.

  • Canooflehead
    Canoof (@Canooflehead) reported

    My dealings with @Rogers & @Telus over the past couple months have made it blatantly obvious that we have a crisis in Canada when it comes to the telecommunications monopoly. Abysmal customer service from both companies. Changing service providers has made no difference.

  • jodyvance
    Jody Vance (@jodyvance) reported

    @guyfelicella @TELUS *he messaged. It’s all AI and off shore, now. No direct route to inside support. I’ve spent weeks, perhaps months, of my time on hold/waiting for technical support/technicians/troubleshooting. It’s never consistently delivered the services I’ve paid for. It’s brutal

  • Moofey17
    Adam Advocaat #SaveTheCaps (@Moofey17) reported

    I was thinking of switching to #Rogers once my phone was paid off because I was tired of Telus’ network quality being ***. Now I’m thinking I might just suck it up. **** ‘em.

  • SkeeterIRL
    p (@SkeeterIRL) reported

    Mad how every cork gay is friends with every other cork gay and if you didn't work at Apple or Eli Lilly or Telus you're never going to be friends with any of them.

  • thom7002
    michael abbadie (@thom7002) reported

    @RobbieMann77 @DonnieandDhali DISGUSTED ENOUGH TO CANCEL YOUR BELL ROGERS DEALS OVER THE YRS WITH YOUR PHONE. MAYBE YOUR WITH TELUS BUT

  • NortVanMike
    NorthVanMike (@NortVanMike) reported

    @wyattd09 @TELUS @Rogers why? couldnt give a **** about sports talk.