Samsung Galaxy Book 6 Series Launched in India: AI PCs with Intel Core Ultra, RTX 5070
Samsung has introduced three models in India—Galaxy Book 6, Galaxy Book 6 Pro, and Galaxy Book 6 Ultra—available in 14-inch and 16-inch variants, starting at ₹1,27,990.

Personal computing is quietly shifting from performance to intelligence. With its latest Galaxy Book 6 lineup, Samsungis not just upgrading hardware—it is attempting to make AI a native, always-on layer of the laptop experience in India.
The real story is not the devices themselves, but how deeply AI is now embedded into everyday workflows.
The Reality
Samsung has introduced three models in India—Galaxy Book 6, Galaxy Book 6 Pro, and Galaxy Book 6 Ultra—available in 14-inch and 16-inch variants, starting at ₹1,27,990.
At the core of the lineup is Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors, featuring a dedicated Neural Processing Unit (NPU) capable of delivering up to 50 TOPS (trillion operations per second). This enables on-device AI tasks such as image enhancement, real-time translation, and contextual search without relying entirely on the cloud.
The premium Galaxy Book 6 Ultra is equipped with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Laptop GPU, positioning it for high-performance workloads including creative applications and AI-assisted rendering.
Both the Pro and Ultra variants include improved thermal management through an optimised vapour chamber, along with battery claims of up to 30 hours of video playback.
On the display front, the devices feature Dynamic AMOLED 2X touchscreens with peak brightness reaching 1000 nits, protected by Corning Gorilla Glass. The Ultra variant adds a six-speaker system with Dolby Atmos support.
Running on Windows 11, the laptops integrate Microsoft Copilot+ PC features, combining on-device and cloud-based AI capabilities. Tools such as AI Select and AI Cut Out are designed to streamline everyday interactions with content.
The devices will be available via Samsung’s online and offline retail network, with the Ultra and Pro offered in Gray, and the base model additionally in Silver.
The Undercurrent
This launch reflects a larger recalibration underway in the PC industry. AI is no longer being positioned as a feature—it is becoming the operating logic of devices.
For Indian consumers and professionals, this shift carries two implications. First, computing power is increasingly being decentralised. Tasks that once required cloud processing are now handled locally, potentially improving speed, privacy, and reliability.
Second, the definition of productivity is evolving. Tools like contextual search or automated image editing may appear incremental, but they collectively reduce friction in everyday work—especially for content creators, students, and knowledge workers.
However, there is also a quieter question beneath the surface: how much of this AI capability will genuinely translate into meaningful use, and how much will remain underutilised marketing promise?
The answer may not lie in the hardware, but in how quickly users—and software ecosystems—adapt to thinking with AI rather than simply using it.
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