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Telus outages and service status in Beaupré, Quebec

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  • Telus generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Beaupré, 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 Beaupré, Quebec

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Beaupré, Quebec 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:

  • jabo_vancouver
    JABO Vancouver (@jabo_vancouver) reported

    @SluaghainO @TELUS I am at a BnB in Osoyoos. At home I would not have these problems.

  • DrivingDadNuts
    DrivingDadNuts (@DrivingDadNuts) reported

    @genymoneyca Interesting read. We just switched to Telus and managed to get 5 phones (whole family) for $180 all in month to month. Regular things they all offer (Canada & US stuff). They gave us 500GB shared a month which we will never get close to using.

  • TELUSsupport
    TELUS Support (@TELUSsupport) reported

    @Minaxi_VZ We're glad to hear that the technician visit has been booked for you. If the issue is determined to be on our side, you will not be charged the $200 technician fee. That charge only applies if the technician finds the issue is not related to TELUS equipment or network.

  • chinoalemano
    ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported

    Was it too late to buy $AXTI or $SIVE at $30, after they'd already run 600%? The answer is obvious: no, it wasn't. The people who stayed out "because it had already gone up too much" missed most of the move. Lately people ask me "Is it too late to buy $AMPG"? I haven't sold a single share. And that alone answers the question. Because if I truly believed it was too late to buy, what I'd really be telling you is that it's time to sell. They're the same sentence with a different face. "Too late to buy" and "time to sell" mean exactly the same thing. And I'm not selling. So I can't tell you it's too late without my own actions calling me a liar. Here's what people get backwards. "Late" and "early" feel like they're about the price. About the chart. About whether you caught the move or missed it. They're not. Not for a company at this stage. It comes down to one thing only: whether you trust what the company actually is. Think about AXTI and SIVE. The people who sold or never entered "because it had already run 600%" were staring at the chart, not the business. The ones who held or bought were looking at the thesis. If you trusted the company, $30 was just a stop on a much longer road. If you didn't, you thought it was late, and you'd have thought it was late at any price. Because that's the trap: if you don't trust the company, it was late at $3, it's late at $8, and it'll still feel late at $20. The chart was never your real question. Your real question was always whether you believed in it, just disguised as "timing". So instead of asking me about timing, ask yourself whether you believe the thesis. Let me tell you why I do. This is the only American company commercializing the 64T64R AI-RAN radio, the physical hardware the open AI-RAN future runs on. It's already deployed at Telus, a Tier-1 carrier. It's a Strategic Partner in the DoD-funded Open6G hub, in the top tier next to NVIDIA, Dell and Qualcomm, with its radio already tested alongside NVIDIA's Aerial software. That's not a meme. That's a real position in a layer the US is actively trying to re-shore for national security. Underneath that sits a real business: 48% gross margins, debt-free, revenue growing fast, defense primes and NASA on the customer wall. And stacked on top, for free, genuine optionality in quantum and in space. The kind of upside you don't even pay for at this valuation. I won't insult you by pretending it's risk-free. It isn't. There's customer concentration, there's dilution, there's execution risk. I've said all of it openly. A company is never a sure thing. But "is it too late" was never the question that matters. The question that matters is this: do you understand this company well enough to hold it through the noise, the FUD, the red days, and the people screaming that you're late? Because that conviction is the only thing that decides whether you actually capture the story or get shaken out halfway. So here's my honest answer, the one I can stand behind: It's late if you don't trust the company. It's early if you do. And the only person who can answer which one you are is you. Do the work. Read the filings. Build your own conviction, or don't. But don't outsource it to a chart, and don't outsource it to me. I just know which side I'm on. And I haven't sold a share. Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR. 📡

  • EhrmantrautCap_
    Ehrmantraut Capital (@EhrmantrautCap_) reported

    AmpliTech Group $AMPG and an overview of its customers: Telus $T.TO - 5G/O-RAN. AmpliTech has already secured a multi-year LOI from Telus and purchase orders. Telus furthermore needs 30,000 AmpliTech radios for its O-RAN buildout until 2029. With each unit costing atleast $10,000, you're looking at a minimum $300 million cumulative revenue until 2029, excluding service/maintenance/installation fees that AmpliTech can charge to Telus. $NVDA, Northeastern University - AI-RAN. Both $NVDA and $AMPG are part of the Open6G project at Northeastern University (supported by the US government), and it is likely that $NVDA is interested in $AMPG's proprietary O-RAN CAT B 64T64R Massive MIMO radio unit, which sends out signals based on NVIDIA AI Aerial's AI-driven calculations (running on Blackwell or Grace Hopper GPUs). $IBM, $AMZN - cryogenic LNAs for quantum. Quantum computers store info in qubits at a temperature of 4 Kelvin (-269 degrees Celsius), these give off very weak signals that need to be amplified without creating any noise. AmpliTech has cryogenic LNAs that can withstand these temperatures. $BA, $NOC, $LMT, US Air Force - LNAs for defense for the purpose of communications, radar and electronic warfare. AmpliTech has military-grade LNAs, that have passed years of qualifications and are fully produced in the US, an important requirement. NASA, $VSAT, $WBD, Paramount - SATCOM/satellite communications equipment. AmpliTech sells LNAs that allow LEO satellites and ground stations to pick up very weak signals and translate them into useful data. They also sell PAs (Power Amplifiers) that allow LEO sats to send signals across large distances. Rarely do you see a microcap with such an impressive list of customers. Below, a complete overview of AmpliTech's customers can be seen, which includes more than just the ones I mentioned above (picture is from @rk8215).

  • B_rockdf
    B.From.BC (@B_rockdf) reported

    @garymasonglobe @TELUS Telus, worst company ever in the last 3-5 years. All support is AI and from a 3rd world country.

  • chinoalemano
    ChinoAleman (@chinoalemano) reported

    @OnlyKlans1 @napoleon21st Yes, I talk about the negatives as well. But you have to keep in mind that I deliberately kept it simple and easy to understand, rather than making it long and boring. There are plenty of people who have written much longer theses. The biggest risk was that, as you'll see on Reddit and other places, AmpliTech's customer was believed to be a "declining" company linked to EchoStar. The names are hidden behind "tier 1 MNO...", but the VP of Telus named Amplitech in a random article that nobody saw. After the CSI work, we've realized it's actually Telus, which is using AmpliTech alongside Samsung and is still in the middle of its rollout. Only about 15% has been completed so far, with the remaining 85% still to go, and they intend to keep using AmpliTech going forward.

  • HunterJame2258
    james hunter (@HunterJame2258) reported

    telus service has gone to sh#t

  • Bit111111
    Bit (@Bit111111) reported

    @RobinHoodlum That's around $2000 I've been down since last September because my AISH payments are only ~$1700 while I haven't been able to get help with filing taxes, a DTC application, etc. It hurts on top of Telus jacking up my bill (I had a disability discount they reneged on) ~$1100/yr.

  • TdotTrucker
    TdotTrucker 🇨🇦 (@TdotTrucker) reported

    @TELUS @garymasonglobe Woah. Nothing should take three weeks or more for your Internet to be fixed. That sounds like a problem on your end and you should be making sure that this customer gets Internet immediately even if you have to use another service in the meantime.