Telus outages and service status in Stayner, Ontario
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- Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Stayner, 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 Stayner, Ontario
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Stayner, 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:
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Robbie Mann 🇨🇦 (@RobbieMann77) reported@FriedgeHNIC @Altonervative Sportsnet subscriptions will be cancelled for most:- I’m not paying for 24/7 services for Toronto:- thank god my cell phone network is Telus! As mentioned Elliotte, all these good people, lost jobs today will have the resilience to go ahead with other alternatives to move ahead.
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John Iosifov ✨💥 Ender Turing | AiCMO (@johniosifov) reportedTELUS 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.
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Zenith Zalapski (@nitwitschool) reported@RoneelkRo In my area it’s Telus and they don’t give a single **** about upgrading us beyond 2010 era internet so my only choice is Elon, which is a surprisingly good service as much as it pains me.
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Salty Cracker 🏴🇨🇦🤍 (@4lt4cOn) reported@MapleLeafs @Rogers Ya thanks for the heads up on the news radio cancellation! How can you justify that when you are literally robbing us for tv and phone services. Canceling my cell service as soon as the contract expires. Heading over to @TELUS
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Ryan's Johnson. 🚧 Lets rebuild this culture! 🚧 (@Jhammy51) reportedSwitching to telus **** Roger's man @Rogers @TELUS
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Sandy Glaze (@EndnLoneliness) reportedCarney will never back down. Gave Telus 1/2 billion $ to Telus. Why. Bring in Digital id?
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JPD (@JDugganhimself) reported@TELUSsupport Telus sucks. Worst company
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Catherine Calder (@Loricatty) reported@alleria_eh Bloody idiot. Here is a PARTIAL list. You are using most. X itself Your Canadian internet provider, such as Telus, Rogers, Bell, or Shaw, routes traffic over an internet backbone that uses equipment, software, and services from numerous U.S companies Apple (if using an iPhone or iPad). Google (if using Android, Chrome, Gmail, or Google DNS). Qualcomm (chips in many Android phones). Intel or AMD (if using a PC). Microsoft (Windows, Edge, Outlook, OneDrive, etc.). NVIDIA (graphics hardware in many computers). Visa or Mastercard (if paying for X Premium or making online purchases). PayPal (if used for payments). Cloudflare (many websites, including services connected to X, rely on it). Amazon Web Services (AWS) (many internet services depend on AWS, even if X itself does not). Oracle (enterprise software and cloud infrastructure used across the internet). Cisco (networking equipment carrying internet traffic). Meta (if they also use Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, or Threads). Adobe (if editing photos before posting). OpenAI (if using ChatGPT to write posts). GoDaddy (if they own a website linked from their X profile). Verisign (operates key internet infrastructure for .com and .net domains).
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Steven Feldman (@HoweBayWallSt) reported"No one likes a dividend cut. But if Mr. Dodig caters to the market’s demand for one, Telus just might shake off the weight that has been dragging the stock down." $T.TO
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michael abbadie (@thom7002) reported@McnuggetPeople @Rogers NO OFFENCE BUT YOUR BELL DID SAME ****. MAYBE ASK TELUS TO GET INVOLVED