Samsung Electronics produces LCD and LED panels, mobile phones, memory chips,
NAND flash,
solid-state drives, televisions, digital cinema screens, laptops and many more products. The company previously produced hard-drives and printers. Samsung consistently invests in innovation. In 2021, the
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)'s annual
World Intellectual Property Indicators report ranked Samsung's number of patent applications published under the
PCT System as 2nd in the world, with 3,093 patent applications being published during 2020. This position is up from its previous ranking as 3rd in 2019 with 2,334 applications.
LCD and OLED panels , which incorporates a Dynamic AMOLED Infinity-O (punch hole for camera) display screen By 2004 Samsung was the world's-largest manufacturer of OLEDs, with a 40 percent market share worldwide and as of 2018 has a 98% share of the global
AMOLED market. The company generated $100.2 million out of the total $475 million revenues in the global OLED market in 2006. As of 2006, it held more than 600 American patents and more than 2,800 international patents, making it the largest owner of AMOLED technology patents. – which offer several advances over the older Super AMOLED displays – real stripe matrix (50 percent more sub pixels), thinner form factor, brighter image and an 18 percent reduction in energy consumption. In October 2007, Samsung introducing a ten-millimeter thick, 40-inch LCD television panel, followed in October 2008 by the world's first 7.9-mm panel. Samsung developed panels for 24-inch LCD monitors (3.5 mm) and 12.1-inch laptops (1.64 mm). In 2009, Samsung succeeded in developing a panel for forty-inch LED televisions, with a thickness of 3.9 millimeters (0.15 inch). Dubbed the "Needle Slim", the panel is as thick (or thin) as two coins put together. This is about a twelfth of the conventional LCD panel whose thickness is approximately 50 millimeters (1.97 inches). While reducing the thickness substantially, the company maintained the performance of previous models, including Full HD 1080p resolution, 120 Hz refresh rate, and 5000:1 contrast ratio. On 6 September 2013, Samsung launched its 55-inch curved OLED TV (model KE55S9C) in the United Kingdom with John Lewis. In October 2013, Samsung disseminated a press release for its curved display technology with the
Galaxy Round smartphone model. The press release described the product as the "world's first commercialized full HD Super AMOLED flexible display". The manufacturer explains that users can check information such as time and battery life when the home screen is off, and can receive information from the screen by tilting the device. In 2020, Samsung Display said it was exiting the LCD business.
Mobile and smart phones Samsung's mobile cell business began with a
car phone in 1984, while its first handheld mobile phone called the SH-100 was made in 1988, which worked on the country's
AMPS 800 network. In 1995, Samsung overtook
Motorola to become the largest in South Korea in the mobile phone market. The company expanded to other markets during this period. In 1998, Samsung became the largest vendor in major
CDMA markets such as South America and Hong Kong, while being overall the 7th largest manufacturer in the world. In 1999, the company became the 5th largest manufacturer of cell phones in the world with a share of 5 percent. In 1999/2000, Samsung released the first ever "
MP3 phone", the SCH-M210, released in
GSM as SGH-M100 and as
SPH-M100 in PCS CDMA in the US. The company's first smartphone was the
Samsung SPH-i300 in 2001. During the early 2000s Samsung popularised the
clamshell ("flip phone") design, and the
SGH-T100 was the first ever "true color" mobile phone and the firm's first to sell over 10 million handsets. and later slider products such as the
E250 were hits. In 2006 Samsung's
X820 with a depth of 6.9 mm was the thinnest phone, and for many years its successor U100 would remain the skinniest at just 5.9 mm. In 2007 it launched the slate style touchscreen phone
F700 which would precede its increasingly relevant touch phones such as
Tocco and
Omnia. Samsung overtook declining
Motorola to become the world's second largest mobile phone marker during 2007. Presently, Samsung's flagship mobile handset line is the
Galaxy S series of smartphones, which many consider a direct competitor of the
iPhone. It was initially launched in Singapore, Malaysia and South Korea in June 2010, followed by the United States in July. It sold more than one million units within the first 45 days on sale in the United States. While many other handset manufacturers focused on one or two operating systems, Samsung for a time used several of them:
Symbian,
Windows Phone, Linux-based
LiMo, and Samsung's proprietary
TouchWiz,
Bada and
Tizen. By 2013 Samsung had dropped all operating systems except Android phone and Windows Phone. That year Samsung released at least 43 Android phones or tablets and two Windows Phones. At the end of the third quarter of 2010, the company had surpassed the 70 million unit mark in shipped phones, giving it a global market share of 22 percent, trailing
Nokia by 12 percent. Overall, the company sold 280 million mobile phones in 2010, corresponding to a market share of 20.2 percent. The company overtook Apple in worldwide smartphone sales during the third quarter 2011, with a total market share of 23.8 percent, compared to Apple's 14.6 percent share. Samsung became the world's largest smartphone manufacturer in 2012, with the sales of 95 million in the first quarter. During the third quarter of 2013, Samsung's smartphone sales improved in emerging markets such as India and the Middle East, where cheaper handsets were most popular. As of October 2013, the company offers 40 smartphone models on its US website. and manufacturing large portions of its phones in India. In May 2022, Samsung Electronics announced the company had expanded the Samsung Knox enterprise mobile security platform with the introduction of Samsung Knox Guard. It allows companies to quickly make phones unusable to potentially deter theft and reduce risk of fraud and data breaches.
Semiconductors module Samsung Electronics has been the world's largest
memory chip manufacturer since 1993, and the largest
semiconductor company between 2017 and 2018. Samsung Semiconductor division manufactures various
semiconductor devices, including
semiconductor nodes,
MOSFET transistors,
integrated circuit chips, and
semiconductor memory. Since the early 1990s, Samsung Electronics has commercially introduced a number of new memory technologies. They commercially introduced
SDRAM (synchronous dynamic
random-access memory) in 1992, and later
DDR SDRAM (
double data rate SDRAM) and
GDDR (graphics DDR)
SGRAM (synchronous
graphics RAM) in 1998. In 2009, Samsung started mass-producing
30 nm-class
NAND flash memory, and in 2010 succeeded in mass-producing 30 nm class
DRAM and
20 nm class NAND flash, both of which were for the first time in the world. They also commercially introduced
TLC (triple-level cell) NAND flash memory in 2010,
LPDDR4 SDRAM in 2013,
GDDR6 in January 2018, and
LPDDR5 in June 2018. Another area which the company has had significant business in for years is the
foundry segment. It had begun investment in the foundry business since 2006, and positioned it as one of the strategic pillars for semiconductor growth. Since then, Samsung has been a leader in
semiconductor device fabrication. Samsung began mass-production of a 20 nm class
semiconductor manufacturing process in 2010, and
7 nm FinFET nodes in 2018. They also began production of the first
5 nm nodes in late 2018, followed by
3 nm GAAFET nodes in 2021, and 2nm nodes in 2025. According to market research firm Gartner, during the second quarter of 2010, Samsung Electronics took the top position in the DRAM segment due to brisk sales of the item on the world market. Gartner analysts said in their report, "Samsung cemented its leading position by taking a 35-percent market share. All the other suppliers had minimal change in their shares." The company took the top slot in the ranking, followed by
Hynix, Elpida, and Micron, said Gartner. In 2010, market researcher IC Insights predicted that Samsung would become the world's-biggest
semiconductor chip supplier by 2014, surpassing
Intel. For the ten-year period from 1999 to 2009, Samsung's compound annual growth rate in semiconductor revenues was 13.5 percent, compared with 3.4 percent for Intel. For 2015, IC Insights and Gartner announced that Samsung was the fourth largest chip manufacturer in the world. Samsung eventually surpassed Intel to become the world's largest
semiconductor company in 2017. On 30 November 2021, it was announced that the company would be producing new auto chips for
Volkswagen vehicles. The logic chips will be used in entertainment systems to provide
5G telecommunications to meet the increased demand for
high-definition video while traveling. The
Xi'an China facility, which has been running since 2014, produced approximately 40 percent of Samsung Electronics NAND flash memory chips as of 2021. In 2024, Samsung was to receive billions of dollars in
CHIPS and Science Act funding for semiconductor facilities in
Taylor, Texas.
Solid-state drives In 2016, Samsung also launched to market a 15.36 TB SSD with a price tag of US$10,000 using a SAS interface, using a 2.5-inch form factor but with the thickness of 3.5-inch drives. This was the first time a commercially available SSD had more capacity than the largest currently available HDD. In 2018, Samsung introduced to market a 30.72 TB SSD using a SAS interface. Samsung introduced an
M.2 NVMe SSD with read speeds of 3500 MB/s and write speeds of 3300 MB/s in the same year. In 2019, Samsung introduced SSDs capable of 8 GB/s sequential read and write speeds and 1.5 million IOPS, capable of moving data from damaged chips to undamaged chips, to allow the SSD to continue working normally, albeit at a lower capacity. Samsung's consumer SSD lineup currently consists of the 9100 PRO, 990 PRO, 990 EVO Plus, 980 PRO, 980, 970 PRO, 970 EVO plus, 970 EVO, 960 PRO, 960 EVO, 950 PRO, 860 QVO, 860 PRO, 860 EVO, 850 PRO, 850 EVO, and the 750 EVO. The SSDs models beginning with a 9 use an
NVM Express interface and the rest use a
Serial ATA interface. Samsung also produces consumer portable SSDs using a
USB-C USB 3.1 Gen 2 connector. The drives offer read speeds of up to 14.800 MB/s and write speeds of up to 13.400 MB/s and are available as 500 GB, 1 TB, 2 TB,4 TB and 8 TB models. Like many other SSD producers, Samsung's SSDs use
NAND flash memory produced by Samsung Electronics.
Hard-drives In the area of
storage media, in 2009 Samsung achieved a ten percent world market share, driven by the introduction of a new
hard disk drive capable of storing 250 Gb per 2.5-inch disk. In 2010, the company started marketing the 320 Gb-per-disk HDD, the largest in the industry. In addition, it was focusing more on selling external hard disk drives. Following financial losses, the hard disk division was sold to
Seagate in 2011 in return for a 9.6% ownership stake in Seagate.
Televisions In 2009, Samsung sold around 31 million
flat-panel televisions, enabling to it to maintain the world's largest market share for a fourth consecutive year. Samsung launched its first
full HD 3D
LED television in March 2010. Samsung had showcased the product at the 2010 International
Consumer Electronics Show (CES 2010) held in
Las Vegas. Samsung sold more than one million 3D televisions within six months of its launch. This is the figure close to what many market researchers forecast for the year's worldwide 3D television sales (1.23 million units). It also debuted the 3D Home Theater (HT-C6950W) that allows the user to enjoy 3D image and surround sound at the same time. With the launch of 3D Home Theater, Samsung became the first company in the industry to have the full line of 3D offerings, including 3D television, 3D
Blu-ray player, 3D content, and 3D glasses. In 2007, Samsung introduced the "Internet TV", enabling the viewer to receive information from the Internet while at the same time watching conventional television programming. Samsung later developed "Smart LED TV" (now renamed to "Samsung Smart TV"), which additionally supports downloaded
smart television apps. In 2008, the company launched the Power Infolink service, followed in 2009 by a whole new Internet@TV. In 2010, it started marketing the 3D television while unveiling the upgraded Internet@TV 2010, which offers free (or for-fee) download of applications from its Samsung
Apps Store, in addition to existing services such as news, weather, stock market, YouTube videos, and movies. Samsung Apps offers for-fee premium services in a few countries including Korea and the United States. The services will be custom-tailored for each region. Samsung plans to offer family-oriented applications such as health care programs and digital picture frames as well as games. Samsung's range of
smart TVs include the apps
ITV Player and motion controlled games such as
Angry Birds. Since 2015, Samsung's proprietary
FAST streaming service
Samsung TV Plus was pre-installed to the smart TVs.
Computing laptop In 1983 Samsung's first computer, the 8bit SPC-1000 Desktop Computer, was released. In 1994 the first Samsung laptop, the SPC5800/5900 series, was launched, featuring a 486 processor. In 1996 the Sens 810 Notebook was introduced with the innovative curved butterfly keyboard designed for easier typing. In 2002 the Sens Q760 was the first laptop with an integrated media docking station for connecting external devices. In 2005 the M70 Notebook featured a removable 19-inch screen that could be used separately. In 2006 the Sens Q35 was the first notebook PC to integrate Wi-MAX technology. Evolution and Legacy Samsung's laptop line evolved with various series, including the three-digit naming scheme, the lettered A, T, P, Q, V series, and later the Samsung Notebook 9. Samsung also released specialized models like the Series 7 Plate PC, a Windows-based high-performance Slate PC, and the first Samsung Chromebook. Currently Samsung produces
Chromebook and
Windows laptops such as the Galaxy Chromebook Plus and the Galaxy Book5 Pro.
Monitors The company started as a budget
display monitor brand in the 1980s, producing
cathode ray tube (CRT) monitors for
computers, from which it then evolved. By the end of the decade, Samsung had become the world's largest monitor manufacturer, selling over monitors by 1989. During the 1990s to the 2000s, Samsung started producing LCD monitors using TFT technology to which it still emphasizes on the budget market against the competition while at the same time starting to also focus on catering to the middle and upper markets through partnership with brands such as
NEC and
Sony via a joint venture. As it grew and became more advanced, it later on acquired the joint venture corporations to form the current Samsung OLED and
S-LCD Corporation respectively from its former joint venture partners.
Tizen As of 2015, Samsung smart televisions and smart monitors run an operating system customized from the open-source
Linux-based
Tizen OS. Given Samsung's high market share in the smart television market, approximately 20% of smart televisions sold worldwide in 2018 run Tizen.
Odyssey Samsung's Odyssey gaming monitors are designed for professional gamers and gaming enthusiasts. As of 2022, the Odyssey range consists of 4 main series, each with different resolutions, refresh rates and aspect ratios. At the
CES 2022, Samsung showed the Odyssey Neo G8, the world's first 4K monitor with a refresh rate of 240 Hz. It features a 32-inch
mini LED 1000R
curved display with 1,196
local dimming zones that supports
HDR10+ with a peak brightness of up to 2,000
nits, and is
G-Sync- and
FreeSync-certified. It was released on 6 June 2022, at an
MSRP of $1,500.
Printers In the past, Samsung produced printers for both consumers and business use, including mono-laser printers, color laser printers,
multifunction printers, and enterprise-use high-speed digital multi-function printer models. They exited the printer business and sold its printer division to
HP in Fall 2017. In 2010, the company introduced the world's smallest mono-laser printer ML-1660 and color laser multifunction printer CLX-3185.
Audio In 2017, Samsung acquired Harman International. Harman makes
high fidelity audio products under many brand names such as
AKG,
AMX,
Becker,
Crown,
Harman Kardon,
Infinity,
JBL,
Lexicon,
dbx, DigiTech,
Mark Levinson,
Martin,
Revel,
Soundcraft,
Studer,
Arcam,
Bang & Olufsen and BSS Audio. In May 2025, Harman agreed to the acquirement of
Bowers & Wilkins,
Marantz,
Denon,
Polk Audio,
Definitive Technology,
Classé,
HEOS and
Boston Acoustics as
Masimo sells its consumer audio business.
Cameras , a
DSLR camera Samsung has introduced several models of
digital cameras and
camcorders including the WB550 camera, the ST550 dual-LCD-mounted camera, and the HMX-H106 (64 GB SSD-mounted full HD camcorder). In 2014, the company took the second place in the
mirrorless camera segment. Since then, the company has focused more on higher-priced items. In 2010, the company launched the NX10, the next-generation interchangeable lens camera.
Other Samsung entered the MP3 player (digital audio player, DAP) market in 1999 with its
Yepp line. In the initial years the company struggled to gain a foothold because of emerging Korean startups
iRiver,
Cowon and
Mpio. However, by 2006, it had gained a significant share in the domestic market as well as Russia and parts of the Middle East, South East Asia and Europe. It was also starting to increase penetration in the U.S. (albeit significantly lower than the market leader, Apple). Samsung launched the world's-smallest
DivX MP3 player, the R1, in 2009. In 2015, Samsung announced a proposal for a
constellation of 4600 satellites
orbiting Earth at altitude that could bring 200 gigabytes per month of internet data to "each of the world's 5 billion people". The proposal has not yet advanced to full
development. If built, such a constellation would compete with previously announced satellite constellations currently under development by
OneWeb and
SpaceX. was publicly demonstrated on one screen at
Lotte Cinema World Tower in
Seoul. == Design ==