Don't burn out. Engineers are highly stressed having to design in alternate parts. This chip shortage will be a problem for a few more years.
I'm not doing anything about it - it's extra workload with no breaks in the schedule for the extra time spent finding substitutes. Constant interruptions about "what can we do?".
Management is too cheap to keep anything in stock.
Supply Chain failed to notice the shortage or do anything about it. They can't even procure parts, by time the P.O. is signed and approved, the parts are gone. Another inept department that does nothing but burden engineering.
Doing a design change, new PCB layout, tests, regulatory approvals is basically the entire product development cycle.
After all that, "uh there's another IC we can't get"
Intel’s CEO Pat Gelsinger reiterated the chip shortage could take a couple of years to resolve.
"While the industry has taken steps to address near-term constraints it could still take a couple of years for the ecosystem to address shortages of foundry capacity, substrates and components..."
"Mark Liu, chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., told CBS his company, having heard about shortages at the end of last year, tried to “squeeze” out as many chips as possible for car companies.
“Today, we think we are two months ahead, that we can catch up (to) the minimum requirement of our customers -- by the end of June,” he said.
The supply shortage may only be alleviated by the end of the year or early 2022, CBS said.
“There’s a time lag,” Liu said. “In car chips particularly, the supply chain is long and complex.”
Liu also sought to ease concerns that U.S. companies are relying on Asian suppliers, which account for 75% of manufacturing, according to CBS.
“This is not about Asia or not Asia, because a shortage will happen no matter where the production is located,” he said. “Because it’s due to the Covid.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-05-02/intel-s-new-ceo-won-t-be-anywhere-near-as-focused-on-buybacksHe doesn't make sense because it's supposedly a shortage of production, which takes years to ramp up.