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Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite With Exynos 1380 SoC Launched in India

Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite is now available to purchase in India, nearly a month after it was launched by the company in global markets. The Galaxy Tab S10 Lite tablet was unveiled by the company in August, and showcased at a Galaxy Event on September 5, where the company launched the Samsung Galaxy S25 FE. Meanwhile, the company has also announced that the Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 FE will go on sale in India soon. Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite Price in India, Availability Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite price in India starts at Rs. 30,999 for the base Wi-Fi only 6GB RAM + 128GB configuration, while the Wi-Fi only 8GB RAM + 256GB storage variant costs Rs. 40,999. On the other hand, the price of the Galaxy Tab S10 Lite with 5G connectivity starts at Rs. 35,999 for the base option with the same RAM and storage capacity as the Wi-Fi only variant. The higher-end 5G-enabled model costs Rs. 45,999 in India. The tablet is available to purchase via the Samsung India website and e-commerce websit...

For 1st Time Since Covid, More Than Half Of Top US Companies Junk WFH

For the first time since the pandemic upended work life five years ago, more than half the companies in the Fortune 100 have their employees fully back in the office, according to a report from real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. 

Hybrid schedules, which two years ago were offered by 78% of the 100 largest US companies by revenue, are now available at just 41% of them, while the share of Fortune 100 firms requiring full-time office attendance has jumped to 54% from 5%.

The shift to an in-office majority is helping to reshape the commercial real estate market. Office attendance in April and May was up 1.3% versus the same period last year, and the most desirable buildings are commanding record prices. JLL notes that "trophy buildings across Miami, New York City, San Francisco and other markets captured all-time high rents," with new construction asking $92.38 per square foot, the highest on record. 

At the same time, with vacancies hovering above 22%, developers are pulling older buildings off the market. According to JLL, national office inventory declined by 700,000 square feet last quarter, as demolitions and conversions, mainly to residential, industrial or mixed-use developments, outpaced new construction. 

The return of employees helps justify costly office leases in premium buildings. Among the 10 largest Fortune 100 companies, seven now require at least four days a week in-person, with the other three demanding full-time attendance, JLL found. According to the report, the average in-office requirement of the Fortune 100 rose to 3.8 days per week in the second quarter of 2025 from 2.6 days in the second quarter of 2023. 

Amazon.com Inc. started prepping corporate staff in 2024 to return fully to in-person work by January. JPMorgan Chase & Co. announced on Jan. 10 that it was ending its hybrid-work option, too. More recently, Starbucks Corp. announced it will require corporate employees to work in the office four days a week starting Sept. 29, and remote managers were told they must relocate to Seattle or Toronto within a year. Workers who opt to leave will be given a one-time cash exit offer, based on documents seen by Bloomberg News.

The office mandates haven't been without their ups and downs for big employers, several of which had to regroup after running out of space for all of their returning workers. The trend is clear, though. After years of uncertainty, companies are tightening expectations and reasserting control over where work happens, and the era of hybrid work being the dominant option has come to a close. Executives are calling people back - and this time, they mean it.



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/D24YjGf

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