Microsoft was founded by Bill Gates and Paul Allen nearly 50 years ago. Here's a history of the company's leadership, products, layoffs, and more.
A reader looks back at his history with video game consoles, from the Atari 2600 to PS5, and laments the end of major graphical leaps forward.
While the exercise of ranking consoles may sound silly, it does force one to meditate on those questions. To create a ranked list of the best consoles of all time, we had to look back at decades of hardware and home in on what makes some stick fondly in our memories.
A well-known hardware leaker provides some new information that may hint at the potential release window of Sony's PlayStation 6.
The new console looks physically similar to the popular Switch system, which has sold more than 146 million units in seven years.
This was a busy week in tech, from the first reveal of the Nintendo Switch 2 to TikTok's looming ban in the United States. Here are the biggest stories you might have missed. Nintendo Switch 2 has been officially announced with a tentative 2025 release date.
Former PlayStation executive Shuhei Yoshida has said he would have tried to resist Sony’s controversial live service video game push. Yoshida, who was President of SIE Worldwide Studios for Sony Interactive Entertainment from 2008 to 2019,
Microsoft should have its strongest and most powerful line-up in history for 2025, but its unlikely to deliver any strong bump to its hardware footprint, which creates concern for the long-term viability of the Xbox hardware platform. But, what if it merged with Windows itself?
The PS6 release date and other details on the PlayStation and Sony console have potentially leaked online early.
According to the leaker, AMD's next-generation GPUs based on its unified GPU technology known as "UDNA" will be fabricated on TSMC's N3E process. N3E is the second generation of TSMC's N3 process and reduces power consumption by 30-35% at a given performance level.
Nintendo's early morning announcement gives us a sneak peek at the Switch 2. Here's what it confirmed, plus the rumors still swirling around the new console.
Still, it seems likely the Nintendo Switch 2 will cost the same as or more than the Nintendo Switch OLED, which is currently priced at £309.99. Analysts who spoke to IGN predict a price of around $400 (£330), $50 more than the Switch OLED in the US.