RGB LED Drivers ICs are used to generate and control 3 different voltages and currents required to illuminate RGB LEDs used as visual indicators in portable appliances such as Smartphones, Tablets, Smart WiFi Speakers and other portable appliances. 4-channel, 3-channel or 36-channel output options are available, suitable for RGBW or single and multiple RGB applications. Kinetic Technologies’ products are the smallest in the industry and are optimized for extremely low drop-out, functionality, minimal system power during processor standby-mode and can be programmed via either an ExpressWire™ or I2C interface. Recent Kinetic innovations are AutoBlinQ™, which can indicate a dead battery condition during charging without requiring information from the processor and BrightExtend™ that automatically reduces driver dropout.

Architectural lighting

Automotive Lighting was the first company to introduce rear LED lights in 2003 for the Peugeot 307 CC,[1] and the first full-LED headlamp in mass production for the Audi R8 in 2008.[2]

In 2001, Magneti Marelli raised its share to 75% after the acquisition of Seima Group. In 2003, Automotive Lighting became fully owned by Magneti Marelli. Since 2019, after the merger of Magneti Marelli and Calsonic Kansei the one-company's name is Marelli.

Pal lighting

This product is shortly to be EOL’d and is therefore not recommended for new designs. Existing customers should contact their local sales office for more information.

Marelli Automotive Lighting is an automotive lighting company that is based in Germany. It was founded in 1999 as a 50-50 joint venture between the Italian firm Magneti Marelli and the German firm Robert Bosch GmbH (K2 Lighting division).

Kinetic Technologies’ highly Integrated drivers have an on-chip timing control unit, where LED blink rate, fade-in and fade-out are user-adjustable, resulting in unique color lighting patterns. The ultra-innovative and feature-rich RGB LED drivers from Kinetic Technologies’ R&D Playground™ provide functional utility, wow factor, and perceived luxury to enhance your product’s market appeal, all with the industry’s smallest footprints, fewest PCB traces, and lowest firmware overhead.