Hello Guest

Sign In / Register

Welcome,{$name}!

/ Lowani
Chicheŵa
EnglishDeutschItaliaFrançais한국의русскийSvenskaNederlandespañolPortuguêspolskiSuomiGaeilgeSlovenskáSlovenijaČeštinaMelayuMagyarországHrvatskaDanskromânescIndonesiaΕλλάδαБългарски езикGalegolietuviųMaoriRepublika e ShqipërisëالعربيةአማርኛAzərbaycanEesti VabariikEuskera‎БеларусьLëtzebuergeschAyitiAfrikaansBosnaíslenskaCambodiaမြန်မာМонголулсМакедонскиmalaɡasʲພາສາລາວKurdîსაქართველოIsiXhosaفارسیisiZuluPilipinoසිංහලTürk diliTiếng ViệtहिंदीТоҷикӣاردوภาษาไทยO'zbekKongeriketবাংলা ভাষারChicheŵaSamoaSesothoCрпскиKiswahiliУкраїнаनेपालीעִבְרִיתپښتوКыргыз тилиҚазақшаCatalàCorsaLatviešuHausaગુજરાતીಕನ್ನಡkannaḍaमराठी
Kunyumba > Nkhani > [{{1]

[{{1]

Cisco (Cisco) CEO Chuck Robbins said that the global shortage of computer chips will continue for six months.


The businessinsider report pointed out that the COVID-19 epidemic has caused a surge in demand for electronic products, the production capacity of global foundries is tight, and the interruption of the semiconductor supply chain has affected many technology companies. Robbins said: "I think we still need six months to get through the storm."

As demand soars, capacity expansion will be crucial. "The shortage of chips is a big problem, because almost everything is inseparable from semiconductors." Robbins said.

Robbins said: "This has prompted semiconductor suppliers to expand their production capacity. In the next 12 to 18 months, the situation will improve."