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Samsung launches Galaxy Book Pro starting at $999, Galaxy Book Pro 360 at $1,199

Samsung outlined two PCs that run many of the plays mastered with smartphone and tablet launches. The big picture: Samsung wants you to buy all of its screens in a continuum.
Written by Larry Dignan, Contributor
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Samsung Galaxy Book Pro 360

Samsung is getting serious about the PC market and hoping to leverage its smartphone and tablet momentum with the launch of its Galaxy Book Pro and Galaxy Book Pro 360.

At its latest Unpacked event, Samsung outlined two PCs that run many of the plays mastered with smartphone and tablet launches. Folks, Samsung seems to finally get the multi-screen play and connective tissue it needs in its ecosystem.

In fact, even the colors -- Mystic Silver, Mystic Blue, Mystic Pink Gold for the Galaxy Book Pro and Mystic Navy, Mystic Silver and Mystic Bronze for the Galaxy Book Pro 360 -- align with the Galaxy smartphone and tablet franchises. If you closed your eyes and just listened to phrases like "all day battery," "sleek," and "fluid experience" the Unpacked PC presentation could be mistaken for a smartphone launch.

At the Unpacked event, Samsung laid out the concept where laptops become more like smartphones. "Why can't laptops be more like smartphones," asked Stephanie Choi, chief marketing officer of Samsung Electronics.

Samsung also touted partnerships with Intel and Microsoft. For Intel, a partnership with Samsung seems to be aimed at competing with Apple's MacBook franchise on M1 processors. The trio of companies touted new PC designs in the future. The idea is that the three companies can leverage their respective strengths in the PC market.  

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While these PCs, which run Microsoft Windows and Intel's latest generation processors, could be work devices they can also fly at home. In many respects, Samsung's strategy rhymes with what Apple is doing to align its Mac, iPad, and iPhone franchises into one integrated stack.

Samsung launched the 13.3-inch Galaxy Book Pro with a starting price of $999 and a 15.6-inch version starting at $1,099. The Galaxy Book Pro 360, which comes with an S Pen, has a 13.3-inch version at $1,199 and a 15.6-inch sibling at $1,299.

Pre-orders start April 28 with availability May 14.

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Both laptops are Intel Evo certified and the way Samsung played up the thin profile and light footprint, it's clear that the consumer electronics giant is hoping to better compete with the likes of Lenovo, Dell, and HP. Where it gets interesting for business buyers is that Samsung can sell companies a stack of productivity devices across multiple screens. PC-centric players lack the mobile devices for the most part.

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Indeed, it appears Samsung is leaning into its mobility know-how to be disruptive to the PC category. Consider:

  • Galaxy Book Pro and Book Pro 360 have AMOLED displays.
  • The Book Pro 360 has optional 5G capability.
  • Officials emphasized the thin profile of the devices. The 13.3-inch Galaxy Book Pro is 11.2mm thick and the Galaxy Book Pro 360 is 11.5 mm. For comparison, the Galaxy S21 Ultra is 8.9 mm thick and the Fold2 is 13.8 mm.
  • Galaxy Book Pro 360 devices come with an S Pen.
  • Samsung mobile devices have Windows PC integration that will follow to the Galaxy Book Pro and Galaxy Book Pro 360.

Other specifications include:

  • OS: Windows 10 Home/Pro
  • Processors: Book Pro 360: 11th Gen Intel Core i7; Book Pro: 11th Gen Intel Core i7, i5
  • Connectivity: Book Pro 360 13.3-inch: 5G (optional), Wi-Fi 6, 802.11 ax 2x2, Bluetooth; Book Pro 360 15.6-inch: Wi-Fi 6, 802.11 ax 2x2, Bluetooth; Book Pro 13.3-inch: LTE (optional) Wi-Fi 6, 802.11 ax 2x2, Bluetooth; Book Pro 15.6-inch: Wi-Fi 6, 802.11 ax 2x2, Bluetooth
  • Memory: Book Pro 360: up to 16GB; Book Pro 13.3-inch: 8GB; Book Pro 15.6-inch: Up to 16GB
  • Storage: Book Pro 360, Book Pro 13.3-inch: Up to 512GB; Book Pro 360 15.6-inch: Up to 1TB; Book Pro 15.6-inch: 512GB
  • Ports: Each laptop has full range of ports and the 13.3-inch Book Pro 360 and Book Pro have additional SIM slot.

The big picture

Samsung is upping its PC game to capture all the screens in the productivity chain. The strategy also rhymes with Apple's approach.

What Samsung is hoping to do its replicate the smartphone duopoly in PCs where the company competes with Apple in the value premium space.

And why not? PC sales have surged amid remote work and school and hybrid office plans are going to become the new normal post-COVID-19 pandemic. There are also profits to be had.

However, the PC market isn't the same as smartphones. Samsung has some strong entrants for the PC market, but HP, Dell, Lenovo, and Microsoft Surface are formidable. All of those vendors have thin laptops that are under the Intel Evo program. Those PC giants also have more selection and price points.

What's unclear is whether Samsung can break through in the PC market. Samsung has had PCs before, but the Galaxy Book Pro and Galaxy Book Pro 360 are among the strongest entrants from the consumer electronics giant yet.

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