Bipolar transistors

Diodes

ESD protection, TVS, filtering and signal conditioning

MOSFETs

SiC MOSFETs

GaN FETs

IGBTs

Analog & Logic ICs

Automotive qualified products (AEC-Q100/Q101)

Raffi Ahmad’s daily vlogs—which document everything from buying private jets to feeding stray cats—regularly pull in 10 to 20 million views within 24 hours. Their popular videos cater to nobar (nonton bareng / watching together) culture. Indonesians love watching reactions, pranks, and family dramas. Raffi has mastered a genre called "Vlog of Affection," where the line between scripted entertainment and reality is deliciously blurred. The landscape is dominated by massive content collectives, or "Content Houses," such as Coffeetown , Saga , and Team RRQ (the latter focused on gaming). These are not just friend groups; they are Fortune 500-style companies.

Shows like Layangan Putus (The Broken Kite) became a cultural phenomenon. It wasn't just a show; it was a social event. Hash-tags related to the marital drama trended for weeks on X (formerly Twitter). Indonesian storytelling is shedding its melodramatic past and embracing gritty realism, psychological thrillers, and romantic comedies that feel authentic to the kita (us). While scripted series are thriving, the real explosion is in popular videos . YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram Reels have created a new class of millionaire celebrities: the YouTubers and TikTokers . The "Rans" Empire No article on Indonesian popular videos is complete without mentioning the Rans Entertainment group, founded by celebrity couple Raffi Ahmad and Nagita Slavina. They are often referred to as the "Kardashians of Indonesia," but their media empire is arguably more impressive.

Selamat menonton! (Happy watching!)