Shotcut is a non-linear video editor with wide format support, a customizable interface, and support for a variety of connections and devices. It is codec-independent so it does not rely on system codecs. It encodes/transcodes to a wide variety of formats via FFmpeg. It also supports streaming from any video file or capture source.
Shotcut is cross-platform, with clients available for Mac and Linux.
Shotcut is natively portable with some additional command line parameters, but if that is not your thing, check out Shotcut Portable.
EMDB (Eric’s Movie DataBase) helps you keep track of your movie and television series collections, supporting both physical discs and media files. The program includes an automatic import from IMDB, thumbnail cover preview, a loan tracker, text or HTML, export to CSV, advanced search and filter functions.
Notepad++ is a tabbed source code editor and Notepad replacement with a customizable interface. Includes source code "folding", allowing users to quickly reduce and expand sections of code to see the overall document. In addition, it features multi-language syntax highlighting, auto-completion, Perl-compatible regular expression search/replace, macro recording and playback, document map etc.
A host of additional functionality is available via the plugins admin view, including tools for file analysis, programming languages, viewers, calculations, user interface and many more.
Sandboxie Plus is an OS-level virtualization solution. It creates an immediate isolated environment in which applications can make changes that are gone as soon the sandbox is closed. Originally a limited shareware called just Sandboxie, it was eventually abandoned by its corporation but it did make sure to release its source code to the public, and it was thus forked by a standalone developer into 2 variants:
Classic variant preserves the original look and features
Plus uses more modern methods with additional features, one of which being portability.
The "Plus" program is "freemium," with extra special (usually non essential) features for the Plus variant available for purchase.
Note: the official homepage’s download page tends to be outdated, so linking to GitHub’s releases instead.
Tablacus Explorer is a quad-pane file manager that supports tabs, mouse gestures, favorites, filters and different view styles. Its functionality can be extended via plug-ins which can be installed and updated from within the program.
ChromeCookiesView is an alternative to the standard internal cookies viewer of Chromium-based Web browsers. It displays the list of all stored cookies and allows you to easily delete unwanted ones. It also allows you export the cookies into text/csv/html/xml file.
RSS Guard is a customizable, skinnable feed reader with a tabbed interface. It can fetch the most known feed formats, including RSS/RDF and ATOM and store them in a nested list, keyboard shortcuts, notification settings, gesture support and more.
Only available for 64-bit Windows. Cross-platform, supporting a wide array of operating systems (Linux, OS X, *BSD, and more).
HWiNFO is a professional hardware information and diagnostic tool supporting latest components, industry technologies and standards. Includes system health monitoring (Thermal, Voltage, Fan, Power), basic benchmarks and multiple report formats (text, CSV, XML, HTML, MHTML).
Some of the features in Windows operating system is available only if you are running a specific or later version of Bluetooth. For instance, the Nearby Share (a feature to share files between two Windows 10 computers) requires Bluetooth 4.0 or later versions. Bluetooth 4.0 adds Bluetooth Smart / Bluetooth Low Energy standard in addition to the Classic Bluetooth specification, so it is a significant improvement in prolonging battery life of devices. The batteries in Bluetooth low energy devices will last several times longer than their classic Bluetooth counterparts.
Bluetooth version number is usually mentioned in PC’s manual or product information page on your manufacturer’s website. But if your laptop is few years old, you likely have lost the manual and might not be able to find its information on the web as well.
Check Bluetooth Version manually
We can use Windows Device Manager to find out the Bluetooth version .
1. Make sure your Bluetooth is turned on. You can turn it on from the Action Center toggle, or you can open the Settings app and go to the Devices group of settings and turn it on from the Bluetooth tab.
2. Right click the Start button to open its context menu and Select the item called “Device Manager“.
3. In Device Manager, expand the Bluetooth set of devices. You may see one or several devices under this. Look for Interl(R) Wireless Bluetooth(R) or your Bluetooth brand name. Right-click it, and select Properties.
4. In the Properties window, go to the Advanced tab. Here, you will see a Firmware Version entry with something like LMP followed by a number, the number will correspond to the version of Bluetooth that you’re running.
The LMP versions Table:
LMP 14 – Bluetooth 6.0 LMP 13 – Bluetooth 5.4 LMP 12 – Bluetooth 5.3 LMP 11 – Bluetooth 5.2 LMP 10 – Bluetooth 5.1 LMP 9.x – Bluetooth 5.0 LMP 8.x – Bluetooth 4.2 LMP 7.x – Bluetooth 4.1 LMP 6.x – Bluetooth 4.0 LMP 5.x – Bluetooth 3.0 + HS LMP 4.x – Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR LMP 3.x – Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR LMP 2.x – Bluetooth 1.2 LMP 1.x – Bluetooth 1.1 LMP 0.x – Bluetooth 1.0b
For instance, Bluetooth adapter’s LMP version 6.x indicates that your Bluetooth version is 4.0
Bluetooth Version Finder
Finding Bluetooth verison manually through the graphical user interface would be time consuming, tedious and, prone to human error therefore we have coded a portable Freeware “Bluetooth Version Finder” . It is the easiest method to find the Bluetooth version number. Just download and unzip it then clik to run it will show your Bluetooth version number
What is New v1.6 (Tuesday, April 1, 2025)
[ ADDED ] – Bluetooth version 6.0 support. [ ADDED ] – Improvements in program codes.
Under the big version number you can read the details . If it fails , you will see a question mark icon.
Bluetooth Version Finder has Cmd parameter support, to view the commands it supports, simply open Cmd where the exe is located and run the btVersion_x64.exe /? command.
Supported operating systems: Windows 11 , Windows 10