Back to home
Technology

It’s getting harder to skirt RTO policies without employers noticing

Source

Ars Technica

Published

TL;DR

AI Generated

Employers are increasingly monitoring compliance with corporate return-to-office (RTO) policies, with 69% of surveyed companies tracking office attendance as required, up from 45% last year. 73% of companies noted employees are meeting office attendance expectations, compared to 61% the previous year. On average, companies mandate 3.2 days in-office, but actual attendance averages 2.9 days, dropping to 2.5 days for companies with over 10,000 employees. This trend highlights a stricter enforcement of RTO policies to ensure employees adhere to in-office requirements.

Read Full Article

Similar Articles

Dr. L.C. Lu on TSMC Advanced Technology Design Solutions

Dr. L.C. Lu on TSMC Advanced Technology Design Solutions

Dr. L.C. Lu, a key figure at TSMC, focuses on design-technology co-optimization, packaging innovations, and AI-driven methodologies for next-gen semiconductor systems. TSMC emphasizes DTCO and DDCL innovations for scaling from N5 to A14 nodes, with NanoFlex and NanoFlex Pro architectures offering efficiency gains. N2P and N2U nodes incorporate advanced DTCO and power delivery optimizations, with hybrid dual-rail architectures achieving significant energy savings. TSMC collaborates with EDA partners for AI integration, enhancing productivity and design quality. Advanced packaging technologies like CoWoS and SoIC play a crucial role in enabling AI scaling, with memory bandwidth and interconnect performance scaling aggressively. TSMC addresses power delivery and thermal management challenges in AI systems through advanced solutions. TSMC's advancements in design methodologies and AI-driven automation promise improved productivity and scalability in chip-package co-design.

SemiWiki
MindsEye's sabotage mission is being slammed as dull and pointless

MindsEye's sabotage mission is being slammed as dull and pointless

Build A Rocket Boy accuses individuals of sabotaging MindsEye's launch, spending over €1 million on damaging efforts. The studio integrates the controversy into a new in-game mission, Blacklist, to showcase evidence of sabotage to players. However, reports describe the mission as lackluster and failing to deliver a compelling narrative. Critics attribute the launch issues to internal problems, such as management and design decisions, casting doubt on the sabotage claims. The saga continues as MindsEye's post-launch turmoil unfolds.

TweakTown
3DPrint.com

The Additive Chicken Coop, Part II: Rescoping

The article discusses the second part of the Additive Chicken Coop project, focusing on rescaling the project. It highlights the challenges faced in enabling JavaScript and cookies to continue reading the content. The article provides insights into the technical aspects of the project and the strategies employed to address the issues encountered during the rescaling process.

3DPrint.com
MIT Technology Review

The Download: a new Christian phone network, and debugging LLMs

A new US phone network for Christians is launching, blocking porn and gender-related content with network-level controls. Goodfire, a San Francisco startup, released Silico, a tool for debugging AI models by allowing users to adjust parameters during training. The National Science Foundation faced mass firings, impacting US science funding and governance. China's AI labs are releasing open-source models, challenging the traditional Silicon Valley approach. Elon Musk admitted using OpenAI models for xAI training, sparking debate on AI ethics and practices.

MIT Technology Review

We use cookies

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. For more information on how we use cookies, please see our cookie policy.