If you’ve tried to buy anything with a semiconductor inside it over the past two years, you’ll know that it has been a nightmare. Supply chain problems and shortages since the pandemic have driven many companies and customers to despair.
But then, at the end of last year, there was a glint of light at the end of the tunnel. “Supply chain update – it’s good news!” wrote Raspberry Pi founder and CEO, Eben Upton, on the company’s blog. In the post, he described a much rosier picture for 2023 supplies of the company’s wildly popular single-board computers.
So can we look forward to supplies returning to normal?
Hidden inventory pools
The initial supply shock was one that almost every hardware firm experienced. “We had finished goods inventory, we had component inventory, and we had a pipeline,” Upton explained to PC Pro. “We were probably good through till the second quarter of 2021.”
But then problems began to emerge further down the supply chain. “What you started to see was lead time blowouts on components,” he said, adding that component deliveries that were typically expected to take 26 weeks suddenly became much longer. He recalls how some vendors, such as the manufacturers of microcontrollers, would suddenly quote him a twoyear wait for parts.
“A big lesson for us was that a 104-week lead time doesn’t mean you can have your chips in 104 weeks, it means go away,” he said with a chuckle.
Esta historia es de la edición April 2023 de PC Pro.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición April 2023 de PC Pro.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Apple's big blues
Apple once joined forces with IBM to create a new operating system that could easily have destroyed the Mac. David Crookes explains what happened
Printers for PROS
We put 14 inkjet and laser printers through their paces in our exhaustive tests for quality and speed so that you can buy with confidence
Raspberry Pi 500
A brilliant update to the Pi 400, this \"all in one\" keyboard computer makes the most of the Raspberry Pi 5's power
Dell XPS 13 (Core Ultra 200V)
Intel's second-generation Core Ultra 200V chips prove an excellent fit for the ultra-compact XPS 13
AI agents: putting AI to work
This year is set to be all about Al agents. Nicole Kobie reveals what this means and whether the backlash is beginning before Al agents are even here
HP OmniBook Ultra Flip
A stylish 2-in-1 packed with the latest technology, and the local AI tool shows signs of promise, too
EMULATION MAKING WINDOWS ON ARM GREAT AGAIN
HOW DO THE LATEST LAPTOPS AND MACS RUN INTEL SOFTWARE ON THEIR ARM PROCESSORS? DARIEN GRAHAM-SMITH EXPLORES THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF EMULATION
DAVINCI RESOLVE
Edit and render videos like a pro. Nik Rawlinson shows you how to hit the ground running in the powerful free editing suite
WINDOWS in 2025
With the new year bringing the curtain down on the most used version of Windows, Barry Collins explores where consumers and businesses should head next
4 surprising things we learned from IBM Research
While AI and quantum computing were the two big themes at this year's IBM Research Europe media event, Tim Danton reveals there was also one surprise lurking in the lab