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Microsoft Bluetooth Test Platform 1.14.0 is a diagnostic suite released by Microsoft to validate how Bluetooth peripherals interact with the native Windows Bluetooth protocol stack. Packaged as a single-version distribution, the 1.14.0 build aggregates every runtime, driver shim, and instrumentation hook required on a test workstation so hardware engineers, driver developers, and Windows device-ecosystem partners can execute scripted or exploratory interoperability checks against keyboards, headsets, game controllers, medical sensors, and other BR/EDR or LE accessories. Typical use cases include pre-certification stress testing for forthcoming Surface-compatible accessories, regression verification after monthly cumulative updates, and continuous-integration pipelines that spin up virtual BT radios to confirm that newly compiled profiles still pair, reconnect, and maintain expected throughput without introducing blue-screen events or power-drain anomalies. Because the kit exposes low-level HCI logs, SSP pairing traces, and GATT service discovery records, QA teams can correlate firmware bugs with precise stack events, while independent hardware vendors can reproduce end-user scenarios in a controlled lab environment before submitting devices for WHQL signing. The software is categorized under System Utilities / Hardware Testing Tools and is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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