After years of intensive work on the mobile side, Samsung has finally officially brought its own browser to the Windows platform, trying to create a more complete Galaxy ecosystem through "new intelligent AI capabilities" and "cross-device continuity" to challenge the dominance of Google Chrome head-on. The desktop version was previously available as a beta version to some users in the United States and South Korea, and now the official version has been released to more Windows users.

Samsung's Windows version of the browser remains consistent with mainstream desktop browsers in terms of basic functions. It supports synchronization of bookmarks and browsing history between mobile phones and PCs. Users can interrupt browsing on one device and then seamlessly resume on another device. In addition, Samsung has also integrated its own services, such as Samsung Pass, to help users securely store login information and automatically fill in personal data, further strengthening account and privacy management capabilities.

What’s even more interesting is its built-in AI assistant function. Samsung has partnered with Perplexity to embed a set of smart assistants with web page understanding capabilities directly into the browser. It can not only understand the content of the current page, but also sense the information carried by multiple tabs currently open. For example, when users browse a blog about travel in Seoul, they only need to ask the assistant to automatically generate a four-day itinerary based on the content of the article. At the same time, it can also summarize and compare the information in multiple opened pages to help users quickly sort out the key points.

This AI system also extends to scenarios such as multimedia and historical record retrieval. When watching a video, users do not need to manually drag the progress bar to find clips. They only need to describe what they want to see, and the assistant can automatically jump to the corresponding time point based on its understanding of the video content. In terms of historical search, users no longer need to recall specific keywords. They can directly ask in natural language, such as "That smart watch I saw last week", and the browser will locate and reopen the relevant page, significantly improving the efficiency of information retrieval.

In terms of platform support, Samsung Browser is now compatible with Windows 11 and Windows 10 (version 1809 and above) devices, covering the current mainstream PC system environment. However, related functions with "intelligent AI" capabilities are currently only available to users in the United States and South Korea, and Samsung said it plans to expand these functions to more markets in the future. Users can directly download and install this new browser through the Samsung browser network to experience an integrated Internet solution integrating AI and cross-terminal synchronization on their PC.