Telus outages and service status in Temiskaming Shores, Ontario
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- Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Temiskaming Shores, 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 Temiskaming Shores, Ontario
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Temiskaming Shores, 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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Community Discussion
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Telus Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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TELUS Support (@TELUSsupport) reported@gyucoffees Hi Gi, although we don’t have visibility into recruitment here, TELUS would never request sensitive documents, like educational certificates, through unsecured emails or ask you to reply to an unverified sender. This could potentially be a phishing attempt. Please send us a DM so that we can inquire further.
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Colin Regan 🚀 (@engalicorn) reportedHuge Fail #Telus @TELUS @TELUSsupport International Easy Pass doesn't work in the United States. If my wife flew to Peru or Afghanistan she would be covered. She flys to Seattle and incurs $100 dollars in overages minutes after stepping off the plane.
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bliss (블리스)⁷ ⟭⟬E ARE B⟬⟭CK 아리랑 ⊙⊝⊜ (@blissblar) reported@BTSypher7 @TELUS You should be able to use wifi while in airplane mode. Airplane mode just prevents connecting to the cellular network.
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Mary Davidson 🇨🇦 (@maryindriftwood) reported@millennials4_wp @JasonHjal I know the U.S. data centres are ill conceived. But Telus intends to use rainwater off BC place next door etc. it seems like some thought has put into this but…. You are absolutely right the municipality I would hope has done their due diligence with Telus or it’s a bad look
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Naz (@faithlessghoul) reportedglad I have never given my money to Telus cos wtf do you mean you want to put a ******* AI data centre in Vancouver??? get ******** out of here.
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Jeff M Johns (@JeffMJohns1) reported@jodyvance @TELUS You're paying a premium for them to figure these problems out. Call them as many times as it takes. Insist on a discount for the inconvenience.
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Fesscentury (as an Ant 🐜) (@Fesscentury) reportedthe fifth remote job application ant made on telus is "ai data annotator role." preferred availability for this job that pays between $6-$12/hr is 4-40hrs per week your job here is to help ai "see" and "understand" the world by labeling images, text, and videos you don't need past experience as a data annotator to work this job what you'll do is simple : • image labeling: look at photos and draw boxes around objects like cars, trees, or people so the ai learns to recognize them • text categorizing: read short sentences and tag them based on their meaning (for example: "is this a question about the weather?" or "is this a customer complaint?") • data cleaning: review lists of information and remove duplicates or fix simple spelling errors so the ai has clean data to learn from simple comparisons: look at two different answers written by an AI and pick which one is better and easier to understand the assesament for this gig is also cheap which i've done. now, i'm just waiting for feedback
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Dr. Ily Fam (@Ily_doc) reported@avilewis Also **** Telus as it tries to take over our public healthcare
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Bear Anger (@BearangerYT) reported@TELUS I love paying for a service that doesn't get provided. Internet is so slow I can't do anything, figure it out
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JT🇨🇦 (@Jeffdthompson) reportedOne of Canada's largest telecom companies just became a real estate developer. And the story behind how is worth paying attention to. Telus owns over 2,300 institutional properties across Canada. Most of them were built decades ago to house copper-based telephone exchange equipment the backbone of the country's phone system. As Telus migrated to fibre optics, that equipment shrank dramatically. Suddenly they had hundreds of well-located properties in the heart of Canadian communities sitting largely empty. So instead of selling, they decided to build. Through an initiative called Telus Living, they are now repurposing and monetizing those former exchange sites into purpose-built rental housing. The company has identified approximately 200 sites for alternative uses. The projected stabilized value of the portfolio could reach up to $3 billion. The execution is already well underway. Their first building in Nanaimo received its occupancy permit at the end of April and began welcoming residents last week. Vancouver's Point Grey is under construction. A further 18 properties are proposed to add over 3,000 homes across BC over the next six years, with plans to expand to Alberta and Quebec. Telus Living could eventually deliver 5,000 to 10,000 units in BC alone. There are a few things that make this story interesting beyond the headlines. First, the locations. These aren't suburban greenfields. They are infill sites in established neighbourhoods, exactly where rental housing demand is highest and new supply is hardest to create. Telus didn't have to find the land. They already owned it. Second, the model. Telus Living could eventually be converted into a REIT, turning a telecom company's real estate liability into a standalone investment vehicle generating long-term rental income. Third, the broader signal. When a company with no background in real estate development looks at its asset base and sees a $3 billion housing opportunity, it tells you something about where value is being created in Canada right now. The housing crisis and shifting technology created an opening. Telus walked through it.