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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Dave Peterson Ⓥ 🇨🇦 (@FedUpWithBadAir) reported@LizardPiou43950 @akarndt @Sportsnet Telus is basically the best of the worst, if that makes any sense.
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Paul (@paul_siddaway) reported@ColleenEJordan1 @jodyvance @TELUS Thanks for bringing this up … we pay for a Premium Service and getting the services we are paying for is nearly impossible!!!
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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.
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Jeff Callaway 🇺🇦🌸 (@JeffCallaway) reported@TELUS customer service is less efficient than this...
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Jeff Schauff (@HitmenEwok) reported@Rogers I know it's only a drop in the bucket but I promise I will cancel my Rogers cable the second my contract expires and switch to Telus for this. Killing Fan960 is the last straw garbage move from this company for me.
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Sp🅰️ceMobActual (@SpaceMobActual) reported@chooseyourwow Telus is actively using AI to mask its overseas call center employees accents. Instead of providing jobs to Canadians in Canada they're doubling down on offshoring. Why support that kind of business?
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Mark Lines (@chooseyourwow) reportedTelus is the only losing position in my portfolio. But it is down big almost $200k. So what to do? I little story if I may… In 2009, in the financial crisis, $BMO was down 50% and dividend 10%. I remember at the time I went to a branch for a meeting with an account manager about some business matter…
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Diva shell (@shellhun44166) reported@SullyCanuck87 @jodyvance @TELUS Rogers is no better awful customer care They are money grabbers too We need more choices both suck
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WhatDoIKnow (@WhatDoIKnoow) reported@TELUS Tell your canvas people to not be so damn rude when you tell them you are not interested. I said no thank you 5 times and he swore in punjabi as he walked away. I know what he said.
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Temple 8 Research (@Temple_Eight) reportedI hope the $ASTS boys like dilution because you're going to need a lot of it to fund your ambitions. While ASTS has a small lead on broadband connectivity their real advantage is spectrum access via carrier exclusivity and they've locked up nearly 60 mobile network operator partners covering over 3 billion subscribers AT&T, Verizon, Vodafone, Rakuten, Telus, Bell, etc. SpaceX operates more than 9,000 satellites around 60% of everything in orbit. ASTS has roughly 9 including recent launches, and is trying to accelerate to about one launch a month to hit 2026 targets. Analysts are skeptical it can sustain this. Each BlueBird Block 2 is a 6,100 kg spacecraft, far more complex and expensive per unit than a Starlink satellite and AST can't launch anything close to the pace of Musk. SpaceX owns the rockets while ASTS has to buy rides on Falcon 9, New Glenn, etc. SpaceX's hardware iteration speed is, as one analysis put it, a real and durable advantage, and if their next gen satellites deliver on data performance, the competitive gap narrows while the constellation scale gap stays insurmountable. SpaceX already took the biggest carrier prize in the US being T-Mobile. So the carrier moat cuts both ways. SpaceX obviously has access to vast capital after IPO, with Starlink generating ~$10.4 billion of revenue in 2025. ASTS is pre-real-revenue at scale ($70.9 million in 2025) and funding itself with convertible debt and dilution. Do the bulls have an answer to this?