Telus outages and service status in Stirling, Alberta
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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 Stirling, Alberta
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Stirling, Alberta 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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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported$AMPG's CEO just confirmed $AMZN as a customer, alongside CPI and Viasat. Not only that. He mentions $SPCX too. Where? An on-camera interview with Maxim Group's senior analyst. Almost nobody has watched it yet. He's asked where AmpliTech sits in satellite. And the CEO answers with a customer list, verbatim: "Companies like Viasat, Amazon, CPI, all those guys are our customers". Ground stations. Per him, pretty much all the high-end ones. Amazon's logo has been on AMPG's customer wall for a while. What's new is the CEO binding it to the ground-station segment, out loud, on the record. THE MECHANISM almost everyone misses The next 30 seconds of the same answer: "In the past, this was not absolutely necessary". Analog signals forgave mediocre front ends. TV got through anyway. Now everything is digital data. And bits don't forgive: every dB of noise is throughput you lose. Translation: AmpliTech didn't chase this market. The market's physics drifted toward the one thing this company has built since day one: the lowest-noise front end. THE MULTIPLIER A ground station isn't one antenna. It's an antenna farm: arrays of dishes, because arrays buy you range. Now run the CEO's own market math: LEOs launching, MEOs launching, SpaceX launching, Amazon launching. Every constellation needs gateways. Every gateway is a farm. Every dish in every farm needs a front end that lives or dies on noise figure. Constellations compete with each other. Farms just multiply. That's the pick-and-shovel position: you don't need to pick the winning constellation. You sell to every farm. And one precision that matters: SpaceX is named as a market force launching satellites. It is NOT on the customer list. The list is Viasat, Amazon and CPI. THE PEDIGREE This isn't a new lane for $AMPG. It's the founding one. Low-noise amplifiers are the company's original DNA, designed and built in the US for decades. Quantum is the lottery ticket. Satcom is the day job. And the day job just caught a demand supercycle. On terminals: high-speed Ku and Ka band, the CEO's words, "we're in the thick of that". THE PATTERN Same interview: Telus, named. IBM and Google, named. Now Viasat, Amazon and CPI, placed in context. The anonymous era of this story is ending one name at a time. "Lowest noise figures in the industry" is the company's claim, on the record. SpaceX: named as a market, not as a customer. Satcom rides on constellation capex continuing. Cycles wobble. The front end is the toll booth of the ground segment. AMPG was collecting at that booth before the road got crowded. Now count the cars. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡
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Toronto Crime Watch (@CrimewatchTO) reportedHalton Police Charge Man in Alleged Rogers, Bell and Telus 'Fake Agent' Scam A 42-year-old man is facing multiple charges after Halton Regional Police say they uncovered a "fake agent" fraud scheme involving stolen electronic devices valued at more than $36,000. According to the Halton Regional Police Service, the investigation began earlier this month after officers were alerted to several suspicious packages being shipped to a post office box in Milton. Police say the scam involved fraudsters posing as representatives of major telecommunications companies, including Rogers, Bell and Telus. Victims were allegedly convinced to order new smartphones or other electronic devices through their existing wireless accounts after being falsely told the products would be provided free of charge. Once the devices were delivered, investigators allege the victims were contacted again and told there had been an error with the order. They were then instructed to return the devices to a post office box controlled by the suspects. Police say the electronics were ultimately shipped overseas and sold for profit. Members of the Halton Regional Police Financial Crimes Unit conducted surveillance on the post office box and arrested a suspect on July 9 while he was allegedly collecting the fraudulent packages. Adnan Asghar,42, of Milton has been charged with: -Fraud Over $5,000 -Possession of Property Obtained by Crime Over $5,000 -Laundering Proceeds of Crime Investigators allege Asghar was found in possession of 22 electronic devices, including iPhones, iPads and Samsung Galaxy smartphones, with a combined value exceeding $36,000.
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reportedThe full Maxim Group interview with $AMPG CEO Fawad Maqbool. 28 minutes, unedited. $AMZN, $GOOG, SpaceX and Telus mentioned. I've been quoting pieces whole day. Here's the entire source. Summary below for the time-poor. But this one earns the full watch. THE HEADLINE. The "Tier-1 North American MNO" from every PR finally gets a name. The analyst asks: with Telus? The CEO: "Yes, absolutely. We're a direct supplier to them". No reseller in between. And Telus now comes to AMPG for NEW product development. More configurations. "Which we'll be announcing". THE NUMBERS. Roughly HALF the $40M LOI equipment already delivered. Orders received now EXCEED the original LOI by $5-7 million. Shipping every day. Most LOIs in telecom die quietly. This one got outgrown by its own customer. THE SECOND LOI. $78M, multi-year, via a partner for a Southeast Asian MNO. Slow by design: proof of concept, licensing. But the radios built for it are a worldwide product. Every same-band country is the expansion map. THE PHASE SHIFT. LOIs were for when they were new and unproven. Now certified, validated, running in the field: "We're going straight to PO stage." From these MNOs and NEWER MNOs. The audition era is over. The contract era is the test. THE QUANTUM NAMES. Test units delivered to IBM and Google. And then, zero hype from the CEO himself: quantum hasn't hit production mode. Early stage. Optionality, honestly labeled by the man selling it. THE SATCOM LIST. Asked where AMPG sits in satellite: "companies like Viasat, Amazon, CPI, all those guys are our customers." Ground stations. LEOs launching, MEOs launching, and on high-speed Ku and Ka terminals: "we're in the thick of that". THE NEW LANE. Network-in-the-Box: portable 5G in a backpack, on a Navy ship, on a cell-on-wheels. Product ready, pre-revenue, DoW interest flowing through the university channel: Northeastern, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech. THE CANDOR. Shipments took a war-logistics hit earlier this year. Back on track, per the CEO. Guidance stays $50M, back-half loaded. H1 won't show the wave. That's the design. THE CLOSER. "The PRs are not fluff. They're actual milestones". Five-year plan: executed. Revenue stage: underway. "Next stage is profitability". 28 minutes. A Tier-1 named. Two tech giants named. Order math that beat the paper. A phase shift declared. Press play. Then decide for yourself. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡
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Harry Henderson (@MacCash55) reported@BluelineBardown @Rogers If i would i could, Monopoly no telus availble at my address, Just signed 2yr with rogers yesterday, if i new this then no way month to month pay the extra sucks
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reportedSome people point out that $AMPG and $NVDA x $AMZN don't have a deal. They're right. And that's exactly why I'm buying with both hands. Think about what a ~$160M market cap is telling you. If a signed NVIDIA deal existed, this wouldn't trade at $6. Call it $50, call it whatever number you like, the point is the market would have repriced it violently already. The current price IS the proof that nothing is priced in. That's the whole opportunity. You're not paying for the deal. You're paying for a real, functioning company, and the deal, if it comes, is free optionality on top. My style, and I know it sounds backwards: the day the deal drops (and my read is that everything keeps pointing that direction) is the day I START considering selling. Not buying. By then the asymmetry is gone and the crowd has arrived. You buy when the proof is missing. You trim when the proof shows up. And here's the floor while I wait. Even with ZERO NVIDIA deal, ever, this is a company with: ➟ Zero debt. ➟ $18.4M in cash and securities. ➟ Gross margins at 48%, up from 33% a year ago. ➟ A $40M LOI with a Telus, with radios shipping today. ➟ And a validation stack most billion-dollar vendors would envy: OTIC certified, the only 64T64R at the global PlugFest, the world's first open-source AI-RAN demo running on NVIDIA's own platform, live demos at the first AI-RAN Alliance-endorsed lab. That's not a lottery ticket. That's a validated business where the market is charging you nothing for the biggest catalyst. The deal isn't my buy signal. It's my sell signal. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡
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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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Jordan 🇨🇦 (@TheStig_16) reported@Alan_B_Happy @TELUS Bad press is better than no press. Aqualini might hate getting bad press, but having nobody talk about your team at all besides game broadcasts? Thats much worse. Sure WE have Twitter, but the average fan? They still tune in during drive time to get their team updates.
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Douche Bag (@DoucheBagInvest) reported@TheWiseIC @mario4thenorth no... stupid *** me never learns.. i own some telus and rogers lol
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Cole Smith (@_Cole_Smith) reported@JimmyJDMitchell @Sportsnet Telus is in the middle of installing new internet lines in my neighbourhood. They can't finish soon enough so I can cancel my Rogers/Shaw account...
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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?