In the last lesson, you encountered the concept of a Real-Time Operating System (RTOS), and you worked out a manual procedure of switching the context from one thread to another. In this lesson, ...
One of the console’s biggest question marks has now been revealed. One of the console’s biggest question marks has now been revealed. Now that Nintendo has finally given us the rundown on the Switch 2 ...
Nintendo accidentally confirmed the Switch 2's mystery button is a "C" Button, in some promotional material for the company's new Nintendo Today app on the Google Play store. The reveal happened after ...
While fans have gotten a look at the Nintendo Switch 2 console, most of the specific details have been held for today’s Nintendo Switch 2 Direct. Naturally, that means gamers have been curious about ...
Last Thursday, Nintendo finally revealed the long-awaited successor to the Nintendo Switch — the Nintendo Switch 2 — following months of leaks and fervent rumors. As you can imagine, there’s been a ...
Matthew is a journalist in the news department at GameRant. He holds a Bachelor's degree in journalism from Kent State University and has been an avid gamer since 1985. Matthew formerly served as a ...
They did it. The absolute madmen did it. During today's Direct covering all things Nintendo Switch 2, it was demonstrated that for the first time ever, the console will have a built-in voice chat ...
The Nintendo Switch 2 has been officially revealed, with an upcoming Direct focused on it in April, but there is still a lot left unknown about the console, including a mysterious button. A new ...
The Nintendo Switch 2 Direct has just revealed that the new C button on the Joy Con 2 controller is a built-in chat function – I was right. This new chat feature looks a lot like Discord and finally ...
James Ratcliff joined Game Rant in 2022 as a Gaming News Writer. In 2023, James was offered a chance to become an occasional feature writer for different games and then a Senior Author in 2025. He is ...
The National Security Agency (NSA) is urging developers to shift to memory safe languages – such as C#, Go, Java, Ruby, Rust, and Swift – to protect their code from remote code execution or other ...