The List Product Line of Samsung Electronics

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Samsung Electronics produces LCD and LED panels, mobile phones, memory chips, NAND flash, solid-state drives, televisions, digital cinemas screens, and laptops. The company previously produced hard drives and printers.
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.

Samsung has made clamshell design cell phones; Samsung’s flagship mobile handset line is the Samsung Galaxy S series of smartphones, which many consider a direct competitor of the Apple iPhone.
While many other handset makers 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 Touch Wiz and Bada.
By 2013 Samsung had dropped all operating systems except Android and Windows Phone. That year Samsung released at least 43 Android phones or tablets and two Windows Phones.

Samsung Electronics has been the world’s largest memory chip maker since 1993 and the largest semiconductor company since 2017. Samsung Semiconductor division manufactures various semiconductor devices, including semiconductor nodes, MOSFET transistors, integrated circuit chips, and a semiconductor memory.

Since the early 1990s, Samsung Electronics has commercially introduced several new memory technologies. They commercially introduced SDRAM in 1992, and later DDR SDRAM and GDDR SGRAM 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 NAND flash memory in 2010, V-NAND flashes in 2013, LPDDR4 SDRAM in 2013, HBM2 in 2016, GDDR6 in January 2018, and LPDDR5 June 2018.

Another area where the company has had a significant business for years is the foundry segment. It had begun investment in the foundry business in 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,[120] followed by a 10 nm class FinFET process in 2013, and 7 nm FinFET nodes in 2018. They also began producing the first 5 nm nodes in late 2018, introducing 3 nm GAAFET nodes by 2021.

In 2016, Samsung also launched to market a 15.36TB SSD using a SAS interface, using a 2.5-inch form factor but with the thickness of 3.5-inch drives. That 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 reading 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 reads and wrote speeds and 1.5 million IOPS, capable of moving data from damaged chips to undamaged chips to allow the SSD to continue working normally at a lower capacity.

In the area of storage media, in 2009, Samsung achieved a ten percent world market share, driven by introducing a new hard disk drive capable of storing 250Gb per 2.5-inch disk. In 2010, the company started marketing the 320Gb-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.

Samsung launched its first full HD 3D LED television in March 2010. Samsung had showcased the product at the 2010 International Consumer Electronics Show held in Las Vegas.
Samsung sold more than one million 3D televisions within six months of its launch. That is the figure close to what many market researchers forecast for the year’s worldwide 3D television sales. It also debuted the 3D Home Theater that allows the user to enjoy 3D images and surround sound simultaneously. 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,” which additionally supports downloaded smart television apps. In 2008, the company launched the Power Info link 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.

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 multifunction printer models. They exited the printer business and sold their printer division to HP in Fall 2017. In 2010, the company introduced the world’s smallest mono-laser printer ML-1660 and colored laser multifunction printer CLX-3185.

In 2017, Samsung acquired Harman International. Harman makes earbuds 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.
Samsung has introduced several digital cameras and camcorders, including the WB550 camera, the ST550 dual-LCD-mounted camera, and the HMX-H106 (64GB SSD-mounted full HD camcorder). In 2009, the company took third place in the compact 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.


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