Day 3: Technical glitches mar CAT
Day 3: Technical glitches mar CAT
Candidates could not appear in the test at few centres due to technical problems.

New Delhi: There was no end to the plight of Indian Institutes of Management (IIM) aspirants as technical glitches continued to disrupt the computer-based Common Admission Test (CAT) for the third consecutive day on Monday.

Candidates could not appear in the test at a few centres in Mumbai, Bangalore and Ghaziabad due to technical problems and malfunctioning of computers at these places.

The situation was worse at a lab in IMS Ghaziabad, where students protested for not being able to appear in the test.

About 2.41 lakh students are scheduled to appear in the test for admission into seven IIMs and a few other B-Schools.

The American firm Prometric, which has been awarded an US $40 million contract by the IIM to computerise the prestigious CAT, did not prefer to make any comment on the fresh developments.

The IIM directors are livid with the exam delivery of Prometric. They held a meeting with the representatives of Prometic last evening.

Nearly 4,000 students could not appear in the test in the first two days of the ten-day long staggered exam that started on Saturday. The Prometric on Sunday said the problems occurred due to virus attack which could be checked.

The test was rescheduled at 24 centres for carrying out repairs on Sunday.

Candidates, who could not appear in the test, have been notified and their exams are being rescheduled within the testing period, said Prometric.

The firm has said it has generated new appointments for individuals who could not take the test and they are in the process of being contacted through SMS and email messages.

The launch of the computerised CAT involved delivery of exams at more than 360 testing labs in 104 centres. The computer-based test was marred by technical glitches on Saturday soon after the exam was started. Students faced problems in opening the computers at the exam centres in Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Chennai, Bangalore, Kolkata and Bhopal.

The labs that were closed on Sunday include 11 in Bangalore, eight in Bhopal, six each in Lucknow and Mumbai, five in Delhi, four in Ghaziabad, two each in Varanasi and Hyderabad and one each in Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh, Nagpur, Kolkata and Coimbatore.

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