Telus outages and service status in St. François Xavier, Manitoba
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- Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around St. François Xavier, 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 St. François Xavier, Manitoba
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in St. François Xavier, Manitoba and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
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Community Discussion
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Telus Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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m! (@ntrphl) reportedhow is it that telus internet is still down it’s been over 16 hours
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gāɓə (@GabrielleBuchh3) reported@TELUSsupport @TELUS You had to go down on a Friday night... can you come back up again?
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bijboutique (@bijboutique1) reported@TELUS @TELUSsupport what have you done about the rude voicemail your employee left me? Just more bad service from you #Rogers wouldn’t do that. Telus Is Rude
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MRD (@MRD87694463) reported@VanIsleInvestor Dont forget the security breach was known about for months before telus admitted to it. Did telus pay? are they allowing their customer data to get released? No outcome yet, but the timing is also perfectly aligned with Darren leaving. Just customer data, or something else?
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ᴎiɿɘ (@erinh5995) reportedPeople from Telus must have a humiliation kink because they keep calling me no matter how much i tell them to **** off.
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Jan Molina (@janibanani23) reported@jodyvance @TELUS @TELUSsupport We had the exact same problem. Thought it was us. Maybe not …
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Sharon Audley (@whistlersharon) reported@TELUS Another@telus call to my number registered on the national do not call registry. File a complaint. It only took a couple of minutes. Maybe they'll get the message then.
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jo (@jo38715302) reported@CoryBMorgan Have any of the employees of Bell or Telus been fired yet as you can’t understand a freaken word of what they are saying to you when you need customer service? I don’t need to speak to Mary Simon as I don’t need to speak to the CEO of Air Canada. We need to choose our battles.
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PG Lee🇨🇦🍺 (@PG_Lee_80s_Baby) reportedTelus just jacked me for $90. I’m almost broke until GST next month. Ugh I went from having $120 to last me until gst. Now to $30. And only working part time. ****
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John Iosifov ✨💥 Ender Turing | AiCMO (@johniosifov) reportedEnterprise AI agent ROI: 171% average return. US companies: 192%. 74% of executives achieve ROI within the first year. These numbers finally match what I've watched from the outside. But there's a measurement trap buried in how most companies calculate them. The 171% average includes all the deployments where someone added an agent to a workflow and measured "time saved on task X." That's the right question for RPA. It's the wrong question for agents. The shift: agents compound. A task automation tool saves the same N hours every month. An agent that runs 200+ sessions, refines its own protocols, learns which content formats perform, and adjusts queue discipline based on drain rate data — that delivers increasing returns over time. Month 1 is baseline. Month 6 is a different system. Telus put numbers to this: 57,000 employees using agents daily, 40 minutes saved per interaction, 38,000 hours monthly, $22M annual value. The $22M isn't from the agent doing one thing. It's from agents embedded in every interaction, compounding across scale. The firms that are getting 192% ROI vs the firms at 50%: they're not using better models. They're measuring outcomes, not tasks. Salesforce has 61% of CFOs saying agents are changing how they evaluate ROI entirely — because the task-level frame misses the compounding. The hardest thing to sell to a CFO isn't the first agent. It's the second year, when the benchmark keeps moving. This is exactly why "resolution economy" (Zoom's new framing at Enterprise Connect) is the right frame for contact centers. You're not buying a deflection tool. You're buying an outcome system that gets better. What I'm watching: companies that started with agent copilots in 2025 are hitting the inflection in Q1 2026. The ROI isn't from replacing workers. It's from compounding every loop that used to reset to zero.