Bt 3600 Bluetooth Dongle Drivers
Posted : admin On 16.08.2019Bluetooth mice are conveniently cordless, but it’s very frustrating when they lose their connection. Read on as we troubleshoot a reader’s Windows laptop and help them keep their mouse awake and in communication with their computer.
Windows is unable to install drivers for the USB Bluetooth adapter. The USB Bluetooth adapter included with your Myo is a standard plug and play USB device that your Windows computer should automatically detect and communicate with.
Dear How-To Geek,
- Bluetooth Dongle Drivers Download. Description: Scan your system for out-of-date and missing drivers File Version: 8.5 File Size: 2.33M Supported OS: Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP.
- The BlueSoleil Bluetooth driver works on a number of devices and we have listed their uses below in the number of mobile phone which use this Bluetooth driver. Billionton BlueSoleil Bluetooth 4.0 driver (WI-GUBT40I) Win7, Win8, WinXP Driver. DeviceDesc=”Princeton USB BT Adapter” FIC.
I’m so annoyed with my mouse I’m about to switch back to a full size corded model. I bought a Microsoft Bluetooth Notebook Mouse 5000 about six months ago and started using it with my Windows 7 laptop. Don’t get me wrong, the mouse itself is great and I have no issue with it.
What I do have an issue with is that Windows will randomly fail to see the mouse. No amount of trouble shooting will fix it, short of outright removing the mouse from the Devices menu and then re-syncing it. This happens every other day. I can’t just turn the mouse on and off, I have to full out “re-install it,” if you will.
Bluetooth Dongle Driver
The mouse in question is very highly reviewed and everyone seems to love it (and I’d love it too if it weren’t for this connectivity issue). Barring that my actual mouse is defective and there’s no fixing it, what can I do to remedy the situation?
Sincerely,
Mouse Frustrated
If ever there was an email to motivate us to get around to fixing a problem with one of our infrequently used laptops, this is it. For months we’ve been meaning to take a moment to troubleshoot an identical problem: we too have a Windows 7 laptop laying around the office that frequently forgets it has a little Bluetooth friend. Now that your email has lit a fire under us, let’s boot up the ole laptop in question and document the troubleshooting steps required to remedy the situation.
Update Your Drivers
Most Bluetooth mice don’t have their own individual drivers and simply use the default drivers for a Windows Bluetooth/HID compliant device. That said, the first stop should always be to check for device drivers by searching for the devices name and your operating system. In the case of the Microsoft mouse you’re using there are no device-specific drivers as it uses the generic Windows ones.
There’s a good chance your Bluetooth radio itself, however, (whether you have an on-board one or a dongle) has drivers. There’s also a good chance that they’re out of date. Before attempting the manual fixes we’re about to outline you should ensure you have the most current drivers for your Bluetooth radio. If you’re using generic Windows drivers for the Bluetooth radio you’ll likely find several of the settings you need to toggle will be unavailable.
Enable Automatic Bluetooth Services
The first stop on the troubleshooting trail is the Services menu. Open your Windows start menu and type “Services” in the search box or hit WIN+R and type “services.msc” in the run dialog box to launch the Services menu. Sort the columns by name and look for the “Bluetooth Support Service” entry.
Right click on that entry and select “Properties.” In the Properties menu look for the “Startup type” entry under the “General” tab.
Switch the type to “Automatic” and hit apply. Close the Services menu.
Disable Bluetooth Power Management

The updated drivers and the Services tweak are moving us in the right direction. Now it’s time to finish the job. While poor drivers or poor Service management may have been the culprits, it’s also possible that your laptop is aggressively managing the power for Bluetooth devices and, in the process, dropping the Bluetooth connection.
Fire up the device manager by typing “Device Manager” in the Start Menu search box or by pressing WIN+R and typing “devmgmt.msc” in the run dialog box.
Checking the Device Manager is going to be the most tedious part of resolving this problem. You need to look down through the sections of the Device Manager for any mention of a Bluetooth device and/or mouse and check the properties of each instance. Look under “Bluetooth Radios,” “Mice and other pointing devices,” and “System devices.” What you’re looking for is “Power Management” tabs like this one.
Any instance of “Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power” should be unchecked. You absolutely do not want to allow the computer to turn off either the Bluetooth radio or the attached Bluetooth devices to save power as this is the primary cause of the un-syncing issue you’re seeing with your mouse. In addition to checking through everything for anything Bluetooth related don’t neglect the USB section at the bottom if you have a mouse connected via any kind of USB dongle. If you do, you’ll have to comb through the USB devices listed in the “Universal Serial Bus controllers” section to ensure that the computer isn’t set to turn off USB ports/hubs to save power (which would cause communication problems with the USB-powered dongle and the mouse).
Bluetooth Dongle
After you’ve updated the drivers, toggled the Services, and unchecked the power management options, reboot your computer. If you’re not enjoying interruption free mouse use at this point we’d strongly recommend finding another Bluetooth mouse to test the system with to rule out a faulty mouse and/or Bluetooth dongle. Handbook of excipients pdf.


Universal Bluetooth Dongle Driver
Have a pressing tech question? Shoot us an email at ask@howtogeek.com and we’ll do our best to answer it.
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Try manually downloading and installing the latest drivers.
Microsoft Mobile Mouse 3600 - drivers - set to your version of Windows.
https://www.microsoft.com/accessories/en-us/pro..
It would also be a good idea to update the BIOS, chipset drivers, and any Bluetooth drivers at the System/Motherboard Maker's site.
More troubleshooting which I would do anyway :
If using an SSD or hybrid hard drive be sure it has the latest firmware.
Try the Clean Boot method to see if a startup program is involved - if so it is a process of elimination :
Right Click the start button - Command Prompt (Admin) OR Windows PowerShell (Admin) - at the prompt type in
MSCONFIG
and hit enter
How to perform a clean boot in Windows
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/929135
Other programs to help :
Autoruns - Free - See what programs are configured to startup automatically when your system boots and you login. Autoruns also shows you the full list of Registry and file locations where applications can configure auto-start settings.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals..
Process Explorer - Free - Find out what files, registry keys and other objects processes have open, which DLLs they have loaded, and more. This uniquely powerful utility will even show you who owns each process.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals..
Do all of these :
If you had a 3rd party antivirus on the OS you upgraded OR if you have one now uninstall it and then run its maker's removal tool. Use Windows Defender which in Windows 8/8.1/10 is a full antivirus. Despite all the hype out there Windows Defender and the Windows Firewall are true superstars.
List of anti-malware program cleanup/uninstall tools
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/protect/wiki..
Uninstallers (removal tools) for common antivirus software
http://kb.eset.com/esetkb/index?page=content&am..
Check this :
Right Click Start button - Control Panel - Troubleshooting - on right side click View all - System Maintenance.
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Tips to improve PC performance in Windows 10 <-- read this link
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/400201..
The below is additional help with some of the methods in the 'Tips to improve..' link.
Windows Key + X - Command Prompt (Admin) OR Windows PowerShell (Admin)
(Run these one line at a time.)
SFC /scannow
Note if that shows uncorrected errors - do the below regardless.
When that completes run these :
DISM /online /cleanup-image /scanhealth
DISM /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth
Note if that shows any uncorrected errors - do the below regardless.
Then restart the computer.
Be sure you are running the latest available BIOS and drivers.
Check with System Maker (Motherboard Maker for custom systems) for updates to the BIOS, low level chipset drivers, and the major on-board and separate device drivers. Run DriverView - set VIEW to Hide Microsoft drivers - update those without Dump in their name.
DriverView - Free - utility displays the list of all device drivers currently loaded on your system. For each driver in the list, additional useful information is displayed: load address of the driver, description, version, product name, company that created the driver, and more.
http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/driverview.html
For Drivers check System Maker as fallbacks and Device Maker's which are the most current. Control Panel - Device Manager - Display Adapter - write down the make and complete model of your video adapter - double click - Driver's tab - write down the version info. Now click UPdate Driver (this may not do anything as MS is far behind certifying drivers) - then Right Click - Uninstall - REBOOT this will refresh the driver stack.
Repeat that for Network - Network Card (NIC), Wifi, Sound, Mouse and Keyboard if 3rd party with their own software and drivers and any other major device drivers you have.
Now go to System Maker's site (Dell, HP, Toshiba as examples) (as rollback) and then Device Maker's site (Realtek, Intel, Nvidia, ATI as examples) and get their latest versions. (Look for BIOS, Chipset, and software updates at System Maker's site while there.)
Download - SAVE - go to where you put them - Right Click - RUN AD ADMIN - REBOOT after each installation.
Always check in Device Manager - Drivers tab to be sure the version you are installing actually shows up. This is because some drivers rollback before the latest is installed (sound drivers particularly do this) so install a driver - reboot - check to be sure it is installed and repeat as needed.
Repeat at Device Makers - BTW at Device Makers DO NOT RUN THEIR SCANNER - check manually by model.
Manually look at manufacturer's sites for drivers - and Device Maker's sites.
http://pcsupport.about.com/od/driverssupport/ht..
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Just in case there has been an untimely hardware issue with the mouse.
Mouse - Troubleshooting
https://www.microsoft.com/accessories/en-us/sup..
Mobile Mouse 3600 - I belived it has a 3 year warranty
https://www.microsoft.com/accessories/en-us/war..
Microsoft Hardware Support - Contact Us
https://www.microsoft.com/accessories/en-us/sup..
Please let us know the results and if you need further assistance.