Comments
ya I am 100% agree with you, ARCUS INFOTECH is the worst institute, Don't join this institute.
Reply
Arcus Infotech, Bangalore :
The Biggest Fraud company operation in town.
I gave 8000Rs for QTP training...And after joining I came to know that the tutor itself has no knowledge on QTP other than running already existing scripts .
InfoTech uses free trial version of QTP valid for 3 months ..!! ( Which obviously has very minimal functionality). Do not have their own licensed QTP SW.
My appeal to people reading this review...Arcus has no qualified faculty & no facility at all..Trust me..!! I have wasted my 8000Rs.
The Biggest Fraud company operation in town.
I gave 8000Rs for QTP training...And after joining I came to know that the tutor itself has no knowledge on QTP other than running already existing scripts .
InfoTech uses free trial version of QTP valid for 3 months ..!! ( Which obviously has very minimal functionality). Do not have their own licensed QTP SW.
My appeal to people reading this review...Arcus has no qualified faculty & no facility at all..Trust me..!! I have wasted my 8000Rs.
Arcus infotech is such a waste institue..
That deepak is really a ... Before joining he will tell 200% job assurance...
And after completing the course,, he will tell that there is no openings now and will get back to us within 1 month.....
He will tell he will place us in tcs, sap-labs, ibm or in some other top companies as their are clients to him...
.
Even the teachers there dont have any knowledge in teaching at all...
Hang that deepak bcz he is playing with students life for the sake of money...
I have wasted my money plz dont join that arcus...
That deepak is really a ... Before joining he will tell 200% job assurance...
And after completing the course,, he will tell that there is no openings now and will get back to us within 1 month.....
He will tell he will place us in tcs, sap-labs, ibm or in some other top companies as their are clients to him...
.
Even the teachers there dont have any knowledge in teaching at all...
Hang that deepak bcz he is playing with students life for the sake of money...
I have wasted my money plz dont join that arcus...
dont join here
this institute wont provide any placements
i want to complaint in police station about ARCUS INFO TECH because
i lost 18, 200rs for mainframe coaching in HYDERABAD8028
this institute wont provide any placements
i want to complaint in police station about ARCUS INFO TECH because
i lost 18, 200rs for mainframe coaching in HYDERABAD8028
I have gone there for enquiry, I didnt feel it as a good institute because they told that There are Java training faculties and Java training classes are started many people are joined but they were unable to show a single student who joined there..They are big liers... Full team is Lieing team...
Arcus infotech is such a waste institue..
That deepak is really a ... Before joining he will tell 200% job assurance...
And after completing the course,, he will tell that there is no openings now and will get back to us within 1 month.....
He will tell he will place us in tcs, sap-labs, ibm or in some other top companies as their are clients to him...
.
Even the teachers there dont have any knowledge in teaching at all...
Hang that deepak bcz he is playing with students life for the sake of money...
I have wasted my money plz dont join that arcus...
That deepak is really a ... Before joining he will tell 200% job assurance...
And after completing the course,, he will tell that there is no openings now and will get back to us within 1 month.....
He will tell he will place us in tcs, sap-labs, ibm or in some other top companies as their are clients to him...
.
Even the teachers there dont have any knowledge in teaching at all...
Hang that deepak bcz he is playing with students life for the sake of money...
I have wasted my money plz dont join that arcus...
dont join here
this institute wont provide any placements
i want to complaint in police station about ARCUS INFO TECH because
i lost 18, 200rs for mainframe coaching in HYDERABAD8028
this institute wont provide any placements
i want to complaint in police station about ARCUS INFO TECH because
i lost 18, 200rs for mainframe coaching in HYDERABAD8028
tel me some institues in banglore that gives pakka knowledge..
and tat offers placement..
pl post ur cmnt to ma id :[protected]@gmail.com
and tat offers placement..
pl post ur cmnt to ma id :[protected]@gmail.com
Hi Please tell some good institute for telecom protocol testing, having good labs, testing tools, and scripting language exposure. ????
i need good institute who are giving quality of teaching 100% in .Net technologies, plz be mail:[protected]@gmail.com
Hi friends please tell me good institute or training center for java or .net that provide good knowledge as well as the 100% placement. Mail me at:- [protected]@gmail.com
thank you rakesh for your valuable suggestion.i[censored] not give this information i also blamed by this institute...
hi friends am vijay kumar student of arcus infotech hyderabad i done my mainframe course in arcus and i got placed in CSC in this month my joining on 26th june 2015 so i thankful to arcus faculty and arcus team.
and i wont agree above comments on arcus and i want to tell you finally that go and meet them in person to institute and even you can find my offer letters on notice board.please dont trust the above comments
wish you all the best for your future.
and i wont agree above comments on arcus and i want to tell you finally that go and meet them in person to institute and even you can find my offer letters on notice board.please dont trust the above comments
wish you all the best for your future.
i'm kavya student of ARCUS hyderabad trained in mianframes technology in feb and got placed in CSC in june and thank ARCUS for providing good technical support and lab facility for practice and also supported in aptitude and communication skills.
I disagree with the above posts made on arcus.Better meet in person to arcus to view my offer letter.
All of you all dont believe all such negitive comments.Wish you all good luck.
I disagree with the above posts made on arcus.Better meet in person to arcus to view my offer letter.
All of you all dont believe all such negitive comments.Wish you all good luck.
Hi friends I am kiran kumar student of ARCUS INFOTECH HYDERABAD, I trained in Mainframes course in oct 2014 in Arcus Hyd, recently I placed in CSC so I would like to Thank you ARCUS Hyd, Arcus provided lot interviews and good faculty...
I disagree above comments what you are mention above I have good opinion about arcus infotech hyd, so if you have any doubt about This please contact me at any Time...
I disagree above comments what you are mention above I have good opinion about arcus infotech hyd, so if you have any doubt about This please contact me at any Time...
Hi this is Subhash
I am one of the student from ARCUS INFOTECH and trained in Mainframe lasr year so successfully completed my course and successfully got placed in on of the MNC called CSC Hyderabad.So i would like to Thankyou Arcus HR and faculty and staff to giving a opportunity to work for one the finest MNC.
I completely disagree with the above the post which are mentioned.
I am one of the student from ARCUS INFOTECH and trained in Mainframe lasr year so successfully completed my course and successfully got placed in on of the MNC called CSC Hyderabad.So i would like to Thankyou Arcus HR and faculty and staff to giving a opportunity to work for one the finest MNC.
I completely disagree with the above the post which are mentioned.
They will not provide any placements money waste. And they will not give proper coaching, mainly IBM mainframes coaching is very bad. The trainer name is Vishal he didn't clear any doubts... At least he doesn't know good English... Don't waste your time and money.. Please join in other institutions..
When you are 8, one of the best parts of reading The BFG has to be the delightfully nonsensical words peppered throughout the story. The reader learns that one must not gobblefunk with words, for example, and how a few gollops of frobscottle is really all you need to feel hopscotchy again if you've been feeling sad.
But the origin story behind the giant's odd vocabulary is more serious and a little sadder than you might expect, according to an article in the December issue of The Lancet Neurology. In it, writer Peter Ranscombe describes a talk given by Tom Solomon earlier this year at the Edinburgh International Science Festival titled "Roald Dahl and the Big Friendly Neuroscientist." Solomon told the crowd about Dahl's first wife, the actress Patricia Neal, who suffered several strokes and subsequently had difficulty speaking. Neal's strokes mostly caused damage to her parietal lobe, a region of the brain associated with many things, among them interpreting the meaning of letters and words.
After going through rehabilitation, Neal did manage to resume her acting career. But as a side effect of the injury to her parietal lobe, she had trouble coming up with the word she was searching for; sometimes, when she did find the word, it ended up being mostly nonsense. She'd say porteedo instead of torpedo, muggled instead of confused, or swatchscollop for food she didn't like. Later, Dahl worked some of these words into The BFG, Solomon said.
These words and others will likely appear in The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary, which will be published by Oxford University Press next summer, allowing you at least a few weeks to brush up on your conversational BFG before the movie premieres.
THE LANCET
But the origin story behind the giant's odd vocabulary is more serious and a little sadder than you might expect, according to an article in the December issue of The Lancet Neurology. In it, writer Peter Ranscombe describes a talk given by Tom Solomon earlier this year at the Edinburgh International Science Festival titled "Roald Dahl and the Big Friendly Neuroscientist." Solomon told the crowd about Dahl's first wife, the actress Patricia Neal, who suffered several strokes and subsequently had difficulty speaking. Neal's strokes mostly caused damage to her parietal lobe, a region of the brain associated with many things, among them interpreting the meaning of letters and words.
After going through rehabilitation, Neal did manage to resume her acting career. But as a side effect of the injury to her parietal lobe, she had trouble coming up with the word she was searching for; sometimes, when she did find the word, it ended up being mostly nonsense. She'd say porteedo instead of torpedo, muggled instead of confused, or swatchscollop for food she didn't like. Later, Dahl worked some of these words into The BFG, Solomon said.
These words and others will likely appear in The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary, which will be published by Oxford University Press next summer, allowing you at least a few weeks to brush up on your conversational BFG before the movie premieres.
THE LANCET
When you are 8, one of the best parts of reading The BFG has to be the delightfully nonsensical words peppered throughout the story. The reader learns that one must not gobblefunk with words, for example, and how a few gollops of frobscottle is really all you need to feel hopscotchy again if you've been feeling sad.
But the origin story behind the giant's odd vocabulary is more serious and a little sadder than you might expect, according to an article in the December issue of The Lancet Neurology. In it, writer Peter Ranscombe describes a talk given by Tom Solomon earlier this year at the Edinburgh International Science Festival titled "Roald Dahl and the Big Friendly Neuroscientist." Solomon told the crowd about Dahl's first wife, the actress Patricia Neal, who suffered several strokes and subsequently had difficulty speaking. Neal's strokes mostly caused damage to her parietal lobe, a region of the brain associated with many things, among them interpreting the meaning of letters and words.
After going through rehabilitation, Neal did manage to resume her acting career. But as a side effect of the injury to her parietal lobe, she had trouble coming up with the word she was searching for; sometimes, when she did find the word, it ended up being mostly nonsense. She'd say porteedo instead of torpedo, muggled instead of confused, or swatchscollop for food she didn't like. Later, Dahl worked some of these words into The BFG, Solomon said.
These words and others will likely appear in The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary, which will be published by Oxford University Press next summer, allowing you at least a few weeks to brush up on your conversational BFG before the movie premieres.
THE LANCET
But the origin story behind the giant's odd vocabulary is more serious and a little sadder than you might expect, according to an article in the December issue of The Lancet Neurology. In it, writer Peter Ranscombe describes a talk given by Tom Solomon earlier this year at the Edinburgh International Science Festival titled "Roald Dahl and the Big Friendly Neuroscientist." Solomon told the crowd about Dahl's first wife, the actress Patricia Neal, who suffered several strokes and subsequently had difficulty speaking. Neal's strokes mostly caused damage to her parietal lobe, a region of the brain associated with many things, among them interpreting the meaning of letters and words.
After going through rehabilitation, Neal did manage to resume her acting career. But as a side effect of the injury to her parietal lobe, she had trouble coming up with the word she was searching for; sometimes, when she did find the word, it ended up being mostly nonsense. She'd say porteedo instead of torpedo, muggled instead of confused, or swatchscollop for food she didn't like. Later, Dahl worked some of these words into The BFG, Solomon said.
These words and others will likely appear in The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary, which will be published by Oxford University Press next summer, allowing you at least a few weeks to brush up on your conversational BFG before the movie premieres.
THE LANCET
When you are 8, one of the best parts of reading The BFG has to be the delightfully nonsensical words peppered throughout the story. The reader learns that one must not gobblefunk with words, for example, and how a few gollops of frobscottle is really all you need to feel hopscotchy again if you've been feeling sad.
But the origin story behind the giant's odd vocabulary is more serious and a little sadder than you might expect, according to an article in the December issue of The Lancet Neurology. In it, writer Peter Ranscombe describes a talk given by Tom Solomon earlier this year at the Edinburgh International Science Festival titled "Roald Dahl and the Big Friendly Neuroscientist." Solomon told the crowd about Dahl's first wife, the actress Patricia Neal, who suffered several strokes and subsequently had difficulty speaking. Neal's strokes mostly caused damage to her parietal lobe, a region of the brain associated with many things, among them interpreting the meaning of letters and words.
After going through rehabilitation, Neal did manage to resume her acting career. But as a side effect of the injury to her parietal lobe, she had trouble coming up with the word she was searching for; sometimes, when she did find the word, it ended up being mostly nonsense. She'd say porteedo instead of torpedo, muggled instead of confused, or swatchscollop for food she didn't like. Later, Dahl worked some of these words into The BFG, Solomon said.
These words and others will likely appear in The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary, which will be published by Oxford University Press next summer, allowing you at least a few weeks to brush up on your conversational BFG before the movie premieres.
THE LANCET
But the origin story behind the giant's odd vocabulary is more serious and a little sadder than you might expect, according to an article in the December issue of The Lancet Neurology. In it, writer Peter Ranscombe describes a talk given by Tom Solomon earlier this year at the Edinburgh International Science Festival titled "Roald Dahl and the Big Friendly Neuroscientist." Solomon told the crowd about Dahl's first wife, the actress Patricia Neal, who suffered several strokes and subsequently had difficulty speaking. Neal's strokes mostly caused damage to her parietal lobe, a region of the brain associated with many things, among them interpreting the meaning of letters and words.
After going through rehabilitation, Neal did manage to resume her acting career. But as a side effect of the injury to her parietal lobe, she had trouble coming up with the word she was searching for; sometimes, when she did find the word, it ended up being mostly nonsense. She'd say porteedo instead of torpedo, muggled instead of confused, or swatchscollop for food she didn't like. Later, Dahl worked some of these words into The BFG, Solomon said.
These words and others will likely appear in The Oxford Roald Dahl Dictionary, which will be published by Oxford University Press next summer, allowing you at least a few weeks to brush up on your conversational BFG before the movie premieres.
THE LANCET
41%
Complaints
17
Pending
0
Resolved
7
+91 40 4003 3838
+91 80 4125 5515
+91 44 4212 9797
#17,Venkatesan Street, T.Nagar, Chennai-17, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India