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Telus outages and service status in Nasonworth, New Brunswick

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Nasonworth, 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 Nasonworth, New Brunswick

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Nasonworth, New Brunswick 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 Nasonworth, New Brunswick

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

  • satansboy1967
    John A Gamblin (@satansboy1967) reported from Fredericton, New Brunswick

    @TELUS I wouldn't give the dog **** off my boot for your cell phone and lousy customer service

Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Btaylor81140
    Btaylor (@Btaylor81140) reported

    @jodyvance @TELUS If Novus services your area, try them. Their customer service is incredible and I’ve only had one issue in two years. It was resolved in minutes.

  • DavidPa43499388
    David Paul (@DavidPa43499388) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Rogers is the worst Victor Dodig is the new CEO interesting to see if he can turn this company around as CIBC did very well under his leadership

  • Infokid1Infokid
    Infokid (@Infokid1Infokid) reported

    @garymasonglobe @TELUS We had a problem at work on Sunday with Shaw. Resolved in 3 hours. TELUS sucks.

  • 604atom
    604atom (@604atom) reported

    @jodyvance @TELUS Yep Telus customer service sucks. Their agents aren't empowered to solve your issue. And then YOU are told to call some other number to be out on hold for hours. And the circle continues

  • dezskills29
    Dezskills29 (@dezskills29) reported

    @TELUS @TELUSsupport I'm tired of your marketing where you spam call people using Canadian numbers yet the people are calling from ******* India call centers. @telus have the ***** to hire Canadians. Can't understand a word they say how about support local main reason I left.

  • RickvonStauff
    Richard von Stauffenberg (@RickvonStauff) reported

    @CanadasLeafs @LeafsPassion85 Bell & Rogers are my only 2 real choices where I'm at. I hate both of them. If I had the option to get Telus, I'd never, ever get Rogers or Bell again. I'd even take Cogeco over both of them. But, I really want Telus to come to Atlantic Canada.

  • imaginet
    Bob Bunting (@imaginet) reported

    @jodyvance @TELUS Just phone Telus Loyalty dept directly. Do not call customer or technical support. Cal loyalty and they will fix it all up and probably lower you bill at the same time. Sadly, like most, you have no idea how telecom works. You only know how to complain when it doesn’t.

  • 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.

  • twizzle51
    twizzle51 (@twizzle51) reported

    @jodyvance @guyfelicella @TELUS Wasted way too much time myself. They are awful

  • olyth_terminal
    Olyth (@olyth_terminal) reported

    $AMPG FYI this is not even including the AI-RAN market which is projected to add another $10b in revenue to the $20b from O-RAN by 2030. So that's a market that went from basically 0 to $30b in a little over 5 years. With 6G and AI Tailwinds to drive it another decade or more. You're probably wondering why this industry is growing so fast. It's not primarily the infrastructure upgrade to 6g. Yes it will help speed up the transition to advanced 5G and 6G BUT there's one main reason. Mobile Network Operator CEOs are fed up with vendor lock-in. They're tired of being dependent on a handful of suppliers with little leverage on pricing, innovation speed, or customization. O-RAN and AI-RAN give them the ability to mix hardware and software from multiple vendors. That drives down costs and unlocks new efficiencies and revenue streams. Right now the vendors know there's no competition. How do you think that's going for the MNOs during negotiations? O-RAN and AI-RAN change this. MNOs are speed running to alternatives at this point; the CAGR on O/AI-RAN prove this and $AMPG has proven their radios bring the results CEOs are looking for. The inflection point is this year. This quote from the Telus VP on using Samsung and Amplitech radios should tell you everything you need to know about how MNOs feel about single vendor lock in. It's stuck with me since I read it. It drives my conviction in $AMPG. “That’s our current mix. And it’s really important for us to have that deployment: if it [multi-vendor Open RAN] remains theoretical. It’s not good enough for us.” Do you feel conviction in Bureaus' sentiment? It should stick with you when you think about where $AMPG is headed.