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Telus outages and service status in Millet, Alberta

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Full Outage Map
  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Millet, 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 Millet, Alberta

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

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Telus. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Live Outage Map Near Millet, Alberta

The most recent Telus outage reports came from the following cities: Wetaskiwin.

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Wetaskiwin Internet 1 month ago
Leduc Phone 2 months ago
Wetaskiwin Wi-fi 4 months ago
Wetaskiwin Internet 4 months ago

Community Discussion

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Telus Issues Reports Near Millet, Alberta

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

  • chreas21
    Christina Easton (@chreas21) reported from Leduc, Alberta

    @TELUS customer service is appalling. It’s not the agents fault I am sure it is the culture that has been created. Heaven forbid you want to speak to a person. Online chat is a robot so useless. Agents don’t take the time to actually look into anything with any effort.

Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • LydiaJohnf5
    Lydia John (@LydiaJohnf5) reported

    @MrCharlesky This telus, doesn't work in Nigeria,I tried it one certain time but I was asked for passport

  • Joker_Fish
    K. McGuire (@Joker_Fish) reported

    @MatchsticksCGY Last year Rogers forced the Flames into the middle of a legal battle against Telus and then they pull this ****. I hope the lawyers are sending the most professional sounding **** yous they have ever written.

  • chinoalemano
    ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported

    I don't know if it's $AMZN. I don't know if it's $NVDA. I don't know if it's Telus. But my bet? High odds it drops as soon as TOMORROW. Here's what I DO know, on the record: $AMPG's management already told us Q2 is coming in "definitely much higher" than Q1. And here's why tomorrow, or any morning this week, wouldn't surprise me one bit. The company has promised news sitting in the chamber (new carrier deals signaled, straight to POs). They just killed their ATM and authorized a buyback, which you only do with everything buttoned up. After doing numbers. Why would you kill an ATM and authorize a buyback if you don't know the money you'll need? To be crystal clear: that's my bet, not information. Nobody outside the company knows the date, I'm not suggesting they'd manufacture news to support a price, and deals land when they land. But if the incentives and the calendar were ever going to line up, it's this week. Now, read this thread. This is the kind of detective work FinX needs more of. The chain he builds: Amazon's logo quietly appeared on $AMPG's customer wall in June. No press release ever explained it. AMPG launched a satellite LNB line in late 2024, covering the Ka band, the hard one. Amazon Leo runs on Ka. Leo has to scale from a few hundred satellites toward 3,236 by 2029, and a constellation is useless without ground gateways. Ka gateways need exactly the low-noise front end AMPG now builds. Amazon NDAs its suppliers hard, so silence proves nothing either way. Is that confirmation? No. And credit to Johan for labeling it as speculation. That's how it should be done. But here's why I'm not stressed about WHICH name it is. Look at the counterparties stacking up around this sub-$200M company: ➟ Amazon: on the official customer wall, product fit for Leo. ➟ NVIDIA: world-first open-source AI-RAN demo on its platform. ➟ The Tier-1 carrier (deduced to be Telus): deploying today, 2 of 5 radios per sector. ➟ A Fortune 1000: five-year LNB supply agreement. ➟ A Fortune 500: a $2M record order. I don't need to know which one moves the needle next. Management already told me the needle moves. Q2 guided much higher. Deals expected this quarter or next. Dilution off the table. The market wants a name. I'm fine with the number. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡

  • FedUpWithBadAir
    Dave Peterson Ⓥ 🇨🇦 (@FedUpWithBadAir) reported

    @LizardPiou43950 @akarndt @Sportsnet Telus is basically the best of the worst, if that makes any sense.

  • johniosifov
    John Iosifov ✨💥 Ender Turing | AiCMO (@johniosifov) reported

    TELUS Digital ran 90,000 simulations training contact center agents with ElevenLabs voice AI. Result: 20% faster onboarding. Early signs of lower turnover. Then they deployed an ElevenAgents voice agent to proactively call newly activated internet customers in their first 90 days. Outcome: customers who got the proactive call were less than half as likely to cancel within 30 days. Let me translate that into a number most contact center leaders will recognize. If you're running a telco with 100,000 new activations per quarter and a 15% 30-day churn rate — that's 15,000 customers churning before they even form a habit. Cut that rate in half with a proactive voice AI call and you're retaining 7,500 additional customers per quarter. At $50/month average revenue per customer over a 24-month average lifecycle, that's $9M in preserved revenue per quarter from a single proactive AI workflow. This is the number that shifts the conversation from "AI pilot" to "AI mandate." Three things are worth noting about the TELUS/ElevenLabs model: **1. They kept humans in the loop for complexity.** ElevenAgents handle high-volume routine calls and route complex or sensitive issues to human agents — who receive better-qualified interactions. The human workload improves in quality, not just quantity. **2. The agent training use case is often bigger than the customer-facing use case.** 90,000 simulations means new hires have practiced situations they might not encounter in their first 6 months of calls. That preparation is invisible on a dashboard but shows up in first-call resolution and escalation rates. **3. TELUS Digital is now a preferred implementation partner, not just a customer.** That's a distribution signal. Enterprise contact center operators trust vendors who can show they've operationalized the technology themselves. At Ender Turing we track enterprise CX deployments closely. The pattern from the last 12 months is clear: the organizations getting results aren't running bigger pilots. They're moving production workloads incrementally — starting with high-volume, low-variance use cases like proactive onboarding calls — and building from that baseline. 90,000 training simulations. 50% churn reduction. These aren't beta numbers. They're the new competitive baseline. If your team is still in the "exploring voice AI" phase, that baseline just moved.

  • 4lt4cOn
    Salty Cracker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇨🇦🤍 (@4lt4cOn) reported

    @yyzsportsmedia @Rogers I listen to am 660 every morning on my drive to work. You suck…canceling my phone service and going with @TELUS

  • PsudoMike
    PsudoMike 🇨🇦 (@PsudoMike) reported

    Vancouver council votes this Wednesday on pausing new AI data centre approvals until the city builds an actual framework for water, power, and noise impacts. Telus has two projects riding on it. Asking a company to prove it won't strain the grid before shovels go in the ground is normal due diligence, not overreach. If a project can't survive that review, it was never going to be a good neighbour.

  • MPECSInc
    Philip Elder (@MPECSInc) reported

    Yes. I watched a client, who became a friend and then helped us start our business in 2003, get decimated by TELUS when they started cutting off the residuals to privately owned stores. They finally just gave up because the "new" make the sale structure with no residuals was insane. I'm sorry to say it, but I _KNEW_ that's where the BPOS then O365 then M365 then Azure residual/remuneration structures would go. All of those big signing bonuses in the beginning are gone now. Large hosting houses were decimated selling M365 a shell of their former selves good people out the door. Why? The answer is obvious, and known by us, but for over libations. ;-) This particular Cloud First IT Company is doing what any company like it needs to do to survive: SELL SELL SELL! Most Cloud First customers, not clients, have no interest in the managed support fees. They'll happily open a ticket and strangle the neck of the Cloud First IT Company when M365, AWS, G00g Cloud, or other goes offline. What an ugly position to be in. :-( Thanks, but no thanks.

  • Zeleros71324
    Zel ☂️🌥 (@Zeleros71324) reported

    The Canadian government really needs to start regulating cellular network providers cause tell me why ******** Bell and Telus are allowed to advertise 5G+ services in my area when their towers are outdated and only offer up to LTE+, and often regular LTE and 4G

  • schafer_von
    Eric Von Schäfer (@schafer_von) reported

    @BluelineBardown @Rogers Already had swapped to Telus because I can't ******* stand Shaw->Rogers tech support when their internet breaks because their service quality is horrible.