Telus outages and service status in Wainfleet, Ontario
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- Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Wainfleet, 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 Wainfleet, Ontario
The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Wainfleet, 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 Near Wainfleet, Ontario
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Wainfleet and nearby locations:
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Andrew Elcich (@canadagunz) reported from Wainfleet, OntarioIs @TELUS mobility down in Niagara, just lost all signal all together @TELUSsupport
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Mike Naraine (@MikeNaraine) reported from Pelham Centre, Ontario@samanthalrogers I chose them over Telus, solely to support your fam ๐๐
Telus Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Jayem ๐จ๐ฆ (@LXXIIpercent) reportedNot good when you walk into a @TELUS authorized repair shop, tell them the issues & before they even see the phone their first question is "is it the Galaxy S26?" @SamsungMobile just released this phone a few months ago & it's already known to repair shops to have issues ๐คฆ
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Playoff-Jim (@DiabloPick) reported@Jhammy51 @Rogers @TELUS Telus is the worst company you can change to. They are idiots. You will regret it in no time.
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Dave Pasin (@dave_pasin) reported@NforEnd @TELUS @Rogers Good luck try and get a hold of somebody at ROGERS. Expect to wait at least an hour to an hour and a half if youโre lucky. Theyโre all bloody awful
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megans lover girl ๐ต๐ธ SEEING ARIANA GRANDE!!! (@huhynjnlvr) reportedtelus is genuinely the worst phone company out there
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ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reportedThe most overlooked part of the Maxim interview isn't Telus $T.TO ordering more than expected and wanting more and more configs. It's what Fawad said about SCALING. Because he casually answered the number one bear question about $AMPG. And almost nobody noticed it. THE BEAR QUESTION. "How does a company that counted ~47 employees in its last annual report deliver Tier-1 carrier volumes?" Fair question. Every micro-cap hardware story lives or dies on it. Now listen to the CEO answer it, unprompted. THE MATH HE VOLUNTEERED. "You're talking about tens of thousands of radios that are going to be used by any single MNO at a time". That's his own sizing of ONE carrier win. Thousands of radios per month or per year. He's not scared of that number. He designed the company around it. THE MODEL. LNAs and defense-grade radios: designed and built in the US. Commercial radio volume: contract manufacturers, structured so AMPG can, his words, "scale up when the demand goes high, and we can scale down when the demand goes low". And the punchline, verbatim: "we don't create a tremendous amount of overhead, and we're cost-effective enough to provide a very large quantity in relatively little time". Translation: capacity is RENTED, not owned. No factories to build before the revenue shows up. No factory overhead bleeding through down-cycles. POs land, capacity scales up. POs pause, costs scale down. The giants carry factories through winters. AMPG carries designs. THE SECOND SCALING LAYER almost everyone missed. Every MNO runs different spectrum. That used to be the moat protecting incumbents: a custom radio per carrier, years per win. AMPG spent its R&D budget killing that moat: "Each MNO has a different frequency... but the beauty of our product is that it's configurable". And then the sentence that IS the thesis: "As soon as that adoption happens, it's just going to spread". One carrier win isn't a contract. It's a template. THE THIRD LAYER: where this goes. Asset-light capacity + revenue scaling = operating leverage. The CEO connected the dots himself: "Revenue has been increasing. Next stage is profitability". That's not hopium sequencing. That's the mechanical consequence of the model, if the revenue holds. AND IT'S ALREADY BEEN STRESS-TESTED. This isn't a whiteboard. This model has already put 2,000+ radios into a Tier-1 network. It's shipping daily against orders that EXCEED the $40M LOI. And it absorbed a real shock this year: war-related logistics interruptions, disclosed by the CEO himself. Status: back on track. A capacity model that survives a war disruption during its first scaling year got tested by reality, not by PowerPoint. Everyone watched the Telus reveal. The quiet part was the CEO explaining how a micro-cap absorbs a Tier-1's demand without building a single factory. Market cap: micro. Capacity: elastic. That's not an accident. That's the design. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. ๐ก
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Marie Boyce (@MarieBoyce7) reported@TELUSsupport @TELUS I am so ******* tired of your stupid AI bot that takes 10 min around in circles to get anywhere when you call. Itโs bad enough I have to talk to gawd damn people in another country who donโt speak ENGLISH about MY SERVICES.
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Reptoid - Independent Content Creator (@reptoid27) reported@TELUS Will you treat me and other disabled people better than @Rogers Shaw treats me? (See all posted details on this platform and others - also if you can, note the CCTS details if and when that goes public, if it does - or I can send you a copy by mail).
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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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๐๐จ๐ฆ๐Phil from New West๐ ๐จ๐ฆ๐ (@Fildo_Baggins) reported@Durmo2010 @TELUSsupport Telus support is non existent. I had too many terrible experiences with their so called support.
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Jordan ๐จ๐ฆ (@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.