To the myriad of users who have found Samsung Internet their default gateway on mobile, a longstanding barrier has finally fallen. Samsung has also released its own windows-based browser, the Samsung browser, which is an official move to compete with Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge directly on the desktop.
This is not some mere mobile app port. The key to this growth is a high level of integration of Galaxy AI which is to make the browser less an active viewing tool and more an active productivity machine. The Samsung Ecosystem seems complete, the first time ever, between the phone in your pocket and the PC on your desk.
Smooth Sailing Sync: Tab-hopping Headaches Gone
The most frustrating aspect of the multi-device user experience has always been the mobile-to-desktop transition. We have all experienced that, reading an article on the train, and spending 5 minutes searching that very same page when we get to our laptops.
The new Windows browser by Samsung addresses this with Seamless Sync. When you sign in with a Samsung Account, all of your digital life accompanies you.
What’s Synchronized?
- Open Tabs: you can continue where you were. When one of your tabs is open on your S26 Ultra, it will be displayed in a separate, From Other Devices section on your PC.
- Bookmarks and Folders: Exporting of HTML files manually is no longer necessary. The contents of your neat folders are reflected in real time.
- Browsing History: The History timeline allows you to access with ease that single obscure site you read on your tablet three days ago.
- Saved Passwords: The use of Samsung Pass changes the landscape of credential filling using biometrically-secured credentials introduced through the use of Samsung Pass into the browser, which provides the facility with cross-platform credential filling.
Building its engine on the backbone of the Chromium engine, Samsung guarantees that all sites display perfectly as they would on Chrome, but with a Samsung touch that is so close to Galaxy faithful that they will find it hard to resist.
read more:
- Netflix Raises Subscription Prices Across All Plans Again
- Anthropic brings viral work tools on phone
- Claude AI Gets Smarter
Galaxy AI: Your Desktop Research Assistant
The injection of Galaxy AI is what really makes Samsung Internet for Windows different among others. Samsung is playing a big role betting on the notion that AI will not be obtrusive or offensive, but a helpful assistant that you visit, just like you do with other chatbots, as we have witnessed during recent tech conferences.
The Windows version also offers Browsing Assist, a tools collection, which appear directly in the toolbar.
Summarize and Translate
In the case that you are looking at a 3,000-word, technical whitepaper, the AI is able to produce a summarized version in a few seconds, in a short and bullet-point version. Moreover, the translation engine can now be described as context-sensitive i.e. not just change words but translate the idioms and technical slang, so the foreign news sites can be readable.
Smart Image Search
You can now right-click any image on the browser to bring out a search powered by AI like in Circle to Search. You either need a particular product or you need to figure out the landmark in a travel blog, the browser determines the object without you opening a new tab.
Tracking Protection and Ad-Block
Samsung has introduced its Smart Anti-Tracking power into the desktop. The AI detects and prevents attempts to fingerprinting, the insidious methods used by websites to track you even in incognito mode. The effect of this is a smoother and cleaner browsing experience that is much less cluttered than regular Chrome.
Design That Respects Your Focus: The Human Element
Software can be cold and mechanical, but Samsung has made it apparent that it invested effort in making the Windows web browser seem like a natural continuation of the One UI design philosophy. The interface is clean with rounded corners and customisable toolbar, which does not bombard the user.
The UI has an element of softness to it, which is haptic-like visual responses to clicking buttons and a Focus Mode that reduces the remainder of the screen when reading long-form material. It is a web browser that is recommended to people who spend eight hours every day before a monitor and would like to have a tool that minimizes the digital eye stress and the mental load.

