Samsung is improving its Galaxy ecosystem to address its biggest weakness.

A new beta aims to connect your phone and your Windows pc or laptop in a way we've been waiting for.
Samsung Internet is a quality mobile browser that rivals Chrome. Until now, it has been limited to mobile, creating a gap in Samsung's Galaxy ecosystem, but that is set to change.
Starting October 30, 2025, a public beta for Samsung Internet for PC will be available to Windows 11 and Windows 10 users in the U.S. and Korea. The aim is to bridge the gap between Galaxy phones and computers for a more integrated experience.
Key features include syncing of bookmarks, browsing history, and Samsung Pass data, so logins and autofill information from a phone are accessible on a PC. The beta version also has "Browsing Assist," which uses AI to summarize or translate webpages, bringing phone-based AI to desktops. Privacy features include smart anti-tracking and a Privacy Dashboard for user control.
The desktop browser market is competitive, with Google Chrome as a leader and other Chromium-based browsers emerging. Chrome's strength is its ecosystem, which syncs across devices, and Microsoft and Apple offer similar experiences with Edge and Safari.
Samsung has been an outlier, lacking a browser to connect its Galaxy ecosystem. Users with a Galaxy phone and a Windows PC may have defaulted to Chrome on their PC, missing Samsung Pass logins.
The new PC browser aims to address this, retaining Galaxy users within the Samsung ecosystem instead of relying on Google.
The move addresses a notable gap, as Samsung, a maker of Windows laptops, has lacked its own browser to tie devices together.
While unlikely to unseat Chrome, the goal is a solid, fast browser that strengthens the Galaxy ecosystem.