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Telus

Telus outages and service status in Vegreville, Alberta

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Vegreville, 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 Vegreville, Alberta

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Vegreville, 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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Community Discussion

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Telus Issues Reports Near Vegreville, Alberta

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Vegreville and nearby locations:

  • Whitecloud197
    Brandon Metchooyeah (@Whitecloud197) reported from Vegreville, Alberta

    @TELUSsupport Hey Telus! I'm 7 days into my Home Security with Telus and I'm More and More Unhappy with the service I'm getting. Who do I complain to?

  • Whitecloud197
    Brandon Metchooyeah (@Whitecloud197) reported from Vegreville, Alberta

    @TELUSsupport Hey Telus, I'm getting an UNREASONABLE Amount of Calls from Latvia and Madagascar. I'd really like to see Telus do MORE to protect me as a customer and prevent these calls from getting through.

Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • dapsyfaj
    Fada (@dapsyfaj) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Canadian businesses suck on customer service , maybe because people have not learnt how to fight for their rights, they just vote silently with their feet. Sometimes you need to bang the table to reset their business brains

  • skldgb
    Sherry (@skldgb) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Exactly why I left them as well after being a loyal customer. Very bad customer experience.

  • NoWayNoHow7
    NoWayNoHow (@NoWayNoHow7) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS None of em are any better I'm afraid. I dare anyone not signing up for a new account, to get service outta any of them in less than a couple hours on hold.

  • Marquis86069666
    Marqee (@Marquis86069666) reported

    @franconaco @Dave_Eby I Built all the Telus netorks DT Van. 30 yrs ago. Its VERY sad now. We Use to hang out the 1990s and was so safe. Ebys is pure evil.

  • Berniceness
    Berniceness - πŸ₯“πŸ₯“πŸ₯“πŸ₯“ (@Berniceness) reported

    @eckoboy3 @Rogers I wasn't with Rogers until they bought up Shaw. I'm looking around, but Bell and Telus are all the same for home service. Mobile is not with any of them.

  • rk8215
    Johan N. (@rk8215) reported

    Most $AMPG holders have no idea where the company's main product actually came from. So I did what I like do: I went through the SEC filings. What I found is quite interesting. AmpliTech sells its 64T64R Massive MIMO radio to a "Tier-1 North American MNO" under a +$40M LOI. The press releases never named the customer. But the filings do. An 8-K from early 2025 links the deal directly to Telus, which is one of Canada's three big telecom operators. But where the radio itself came from? This was quite interesting find. In March 2025, AmpliTech signed an $8M deal with a company called Titan Crest, LLC which is a private Delaware company to buy the IP behind its 5G ORAN radios. $4M in cash, $4M in shares, paid in two steps. Step 1 was only due after the Telus orders came in. So AmpliTech did not pay $8M for unproven tech and hope a customer would show up. They only paid once the customer was real. For a micro-cap, that is a smart, low-risk deal. Step 1 closed in April 2025: $3.5M cash + 914,635 shares. Step 2 is the one to watch now. The last $0.5M cash + $2.5M in shares is due this quarter or next (Q2/Q3 2026). It hands the full technology and IP rights to AmpliTech, plus a 10-year non-compete from Titan. In simple terms: the day that payment hits, AmpliTech fully owns the IP behind its #1 product. Until then, it does not. So the real $AMPG story is a chain: 1) Titan built the tech 2) AmpliTech turned it into a product and makes it in the USA 3) Telus uses it. Telus recently partnered with Samsung to build Canada’s First 5G Virtualized RAN, Open RAN Network which is quite telling when the market is heading. I wonder who is behind Titan Crest? A no-name Delaware LLC, sitting on ready-to-use 5G radio IP. NFA. DYOR. πŸ”₯πŸš€

  • Maximum__YT
    Maximum YT (@Maximum__YT) reported

    @status_is_down This seems like a Canada wide issue, cloudflare and telus is down.

  • rk8215
    Johan N. (@rk8215) reported

    We are living in exceptional times. Retail investors can actually front-run institutional money right now, because the edge is in places big funds don't look: small companies, and information buried in filings, articles, and interviews that most people never read. $AMPG is a great case study. So is @aleabitoreddit with picks like $SIVE and $AXTI. What do I mean? Most institutions have no idea that AmpliTech quietly updated its website to list customers like $AMZN and $NVDA. They have no idea AmpliTech is supplying 30,000 radios to TELUS for its project with Samsung, a deal that should bring in millions in revenue, because this was mentioned in one interview, in one quote. Why don't they know? There is two reasons: First, size. The market cap is tiny, so most funds have simply never heard of the company. Second, rules. A lot of institutions have internal mandates that ban them from buying micro-caps. They are treated as too speculative, too high-beta, too risky. But once a stock crosses some threshold (say $500M, or wherever their policy sits), it becomes "investable." That is when the floodgates can open and institutional money pours in. Here is the key lesson: By the time a stock is "safe" enough for institutions, the easy gains are often already made. The people who did the homework early, who read the filings while the company was still too small for Wall Street are the ones who were there first. That small window, before the institutions are allowed in, is exactly where I want to be. That is what front-running institutional money really means.

  • Ceiba59Co
    Cindy O πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦β€οΈ πŸ–– (@Ceiba59Co) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Yeah, I disengaged from Telus about 20 years ago - landline and internet. Customer 'service' was beyond dismal.

  • dailygallows
    Ben Leonard (@dailygallows) reported

    @JonFraserTF @TELUS Had the same issue with Rogers last month. It ended with me uttering the words β€˜I’ve been a customer for 13 years and don’t want to leave, do you not see how insane this is?’