190,000 units of the Samsung Galaxy S3 are sold every day. This is the latest edition of the South Korean manufacturer's high-end phone, and its success is not only due to the fact that it is one of the most complete mobile phones in terms of performance and most attractive in design on the market, but it also has a lot to do thank a device that went on sale at sunset in the summer of 2010. It is the Samsung Galaxy S, the team with which a series was inaugurated that, to this day, already has more than one hundred million units sold around the world.
These are official data from Samsung, which is pleased to have marked a milestone in its catalog. The distribution of equipment sold as part of the Galaxy S family is marked by the almost 20 million sold from the first installment, the more than 40 million that have been registered from the Samsung Galaxy S2 and the almost 41 million units that between May and December 2012 were placed from the Samsung Galaxy S3. Seen this way, it is understood that we are referring to the three deliveries "" in their different regional variations "" of the Galaxy S, and not to their later editions (the Samsung Galaxy S2,for example, it has just been presented in its Plus version). This being the case, the family's sales volume would become even higher.
It is important that we highlight a certain focus on this brand reached by Samsung. Although the first Samsung Galaxy S managed to sell 10 million units in its first year, its successor doubled that record in the same period, and even more: the Samsung Galaxy S3 managed to sell those same 10 million terminals in just a few weeks, quadrupling the milestone in the space between the months of June "" went on sale at the end of May 2012 "" and December of the year we have just closed.
As we pointed out at the beginning, the Samsung Galaxy S3 has been selling at a rate of 190,000 units per day. Following this scale, until the Samsung Galaxy S4 is presented, we could see that the current high-end range would touch 70 million units for the anniversary of its launch. Seen in this way, what would be to come with the fourth generation of Galaxy S terminals would be a real revolution in sales for the South Korean manufacturer. It is no longer just about showing the most complete and surprising device in the series, but also culminating with a recognizable brand that is no longer seen as an answer to Apple's iPhone, but as a device that has been made with an egg on the market in its own right.
However, the competition will make things difficult for the imminent Samsung Galaxy S4. The Japanese Sony squeezes its new range Xperia and HTC has no intention of being intimidated by their latest financial results. The South Korean LG has also taken a breath thanks to the support of Google "" choosing it for the manufacture of the very competitive although commercially poorly planned Nexus 4 "" and Huawei is making steady progress in its aspirations to become the third mobile manufacturer in the market.