Yes but it opens samsung software first, with apple display directly. Cheap plastic material used, apple display made of aluminium much better processed
That was also my problem at the time. I sent a support enquiry to Samsung by email. This was never answered, so I would be interested if you start what they write immediately, so it looks like you have to buy another monitor or TV from another manufacturer. Which is what I did, I replaced a Samsung TV with a Philipps.
We tested these displays on several MacBook Pros, including a 2018 13-inch MacBook Pro (with Intel graphics). We couldn't get it to work with this display (as soon as we plugged the laptop into this display, we got abstract patterns on both the monitor and the laptop screen). A 15-inch MacBook Pro from 2017 we were able to run, but only at the 30Hz refresh rate. On the other hand, MacBook Pros with Apple's silicon work perfectly.
I disagree with hfaizi05. I don't own this monitor specifically, but I have done this on several other monitors. If a monitor has several inputs, you can always use them from different computers and switch them on the monitor, you basically don't need a KVM switch for this if you have a switchable mouse and keyboard for this (there are such from Logitech, for example). It would be more tricky if, for example, you wanted to connect two different computers to the Thunderbolt port. In that case, you would need a switch, and since there are no Thunderbolt switches, you would have to use a USB-C switch with DP-Alt function. Supposedly it works, but I have no experience with it.
Thank you very much for pointing this out. We will gladly forward this internally to the responsible department and hope that this will be corrected in a timely manner.