Missing Bluetooth Toggle Windows 11 ⭐ Bonus Inside

For the most accurate results from NormalizeScaleGradient, you need to purchase a license for the C++ module NSGXnml. This runs in the background and enables all of NSG's extra capabilities. See the Purchase page.


Customer Reviews (NSG)

Missing Bluetooth Toggle Windows 11 ⭐ Bonus Inside

Settings app under "Bluetooth & devices". Its absence typically indicates that the operating system no longer recognizes the Bluetooth adapter as an active device, often categorizing it as "Unknown" or simply ignoring it due to a driver error. Common Root Causes Several factors can trigger this disappearance: Driver Corruption: Updates to Windows or third-party software can sometimes corrupt existing Bluetooth drivers, leading the system to disable the hardware for safety. Disabled Services: The "Bluetooth Support Service" must be active for the toggle to function. If this service is stopped or set to manual, the UI elements will often disappear. Fast Startup Glitches: Windows 11's "Fast Startup" feature saves a snapshot of the system kernel and drivers to speed up boot times. If a driver error occurs during this snapshot, the error persists across restarts until the feature is disabled or a full power cycle is performed. Static Charge: In some laptops, static electricity can build up in the capacitors, causing the network/Bluetooth card to hang. This requires a physical "flea power" drain to reset. 11 sites Fix Bluetooth disappeared in Windows - Microsoft Support Windows 11 Windows 10. The Bluetooth icon or toggle may be missing or appear grayed out in Settings or Quick settings if Windows c... Microsoft Support the bluetooth toggle is gone from pc - Microsoft Q&A Feb 23, 2026 —

If you have tried all the software fixes above and the Bluetooth category is still completely missing from Device Manager (even after selecting "Show hidden devices"), you may be dealing with a hardware failure. missing bluetooth toggle windows 11

It is a common frustration: you go to connect your headphones or mouse, only to find the in the Windows 11 Quick Settings and Settings menu. This usually indicates that Windows has "lost" the Bluetooth hardware due to a driver glitch, a disabled service, or a power-state error. Settings app under "Bluetooth & devices"

Click the pencil (Edit) icon in Quick Settings to add the toggle back—only to find it is already added but still greyed out. Workaround rating: 0/10. This is the cruelest joke Windows 11 plays on you. Disabled Services: The "Bluetooth Support Service" must be

Here is the review of this design flaw and the "solutions" required to fix it.

It sounds cliché, but a restart clears temporary cache issues and forces hardware to re-initialize. If you haven't done so yet, restart your PC now.

Xu Kang, May 2025

... Your dedication to advancing astrophotography post-processing deserves sincere appreciation. I look forward to pushing the boundaries of imaging with these sophisticated algorithms.

Sky at Night magazine, October 2023, p78

Mathew Ludgate, Astronomy Photographer of the year shortlisted entrant in the 'Stars and Nebulae' category:

... After using the WBPP script in PixInsight to perform image calibration and registration, I utilised the Normalize Scale Gradient (NSG) script by John Murphy. This corrects the brightness and gradient of your subs using differential photometry to model the relative scales and gradients. I image at a dark site but I still find NSG very useful as a first step...

Paul Denny, 2023

... thank you for writing this script [NSG] and making it available to the astrophotography community. I am quite new to this and still on a steep learning curve, but I do know enough to see what a great tool this is, as is your excellent documentation and YouTube videos. I feel as though I understand and have control over this part of the processing flow for the first time.

AdamBlockStudios, Adam Block, 2022

... I helped (with some advice and ideas) the brilliant John Murphy as he crafted NormalizeScaleGradient (NSG). The normalization and weighting of data is a fundamental and critical component of image processing.

www.adamblockstudios.com


An introduction to NSG


NormalizeScaleGradient (NSG) normalizes the scale and gradient to that of the reference image. Differential stellar photometry is used to determine the scale, and a surface spline to model the relative gradient. It is designed to achieve the following goals:

Scaling the target images: This involves multiplying each target image by a factor to make its (brightness) scale match that of the reference image. This has to be done before gradient removal.

Relative gradient removal: After normalization, all the target frames will only contain the gradient present in the reference image. By choosing the reference image carefully, the overall gradient is reduced and simplified.

Image weights: Calculate image weights using the scientifically correct formula (signal to noise ratio)²

Accurate normalization is crucial for good data rejection while stacking.

Finding the best reference image

PixInsight already includes a blink tool, but for judging gradients, the displayed images can be misleading. The reason for this is it's difficult to display all the images in a completely fair way; The STF and Histogram functions do not accurately normalize the images. An image with a large gradient is likely to be scaled differently to an image without light pollution. This makes it difficult to determine how the image gradients compare.

The NSG blink dialog is specialized for finding the best reference image:


NSG Blink

Accurate scale factor

Photometry is used to determine a very accurate (brightness) scale factor. Great care is taken to ensure that exactly the same stars are used in the reference and target images.

Photometry

Gradient correction: What you see is what you get.

Mouse over the image to display the gradient correction. This simulates the user toggling the 'Gradient corrected target' checkbox. If the reference checkbox is not selected (as in this example), it blinks between the uncorrected and corrected target image.

If the reference checkbox is selected, it blinks between the reference image and corrected target image. Modify the 'Gradient smoothness' until the correction is excellent. What you see is what you get, making it easy to achieve optimum results.

Uncorrected / corrected image

It is important to understand that NSG is designed to make the target image's gradient match the reference image. Any gradient in the reference image will remain and must be removed after stacking with a process such as DynamicBackgroundExtraction.

Transmission graph: Detect the clouds!

A sudden dip indicates a reduction in the astronomical signal (this graph ignores variations in light pollution). A sudden dip indicates clouds, or a partially obscured telescope aperture (for example, by the dome).

Clouded images are always worth removing because they can introduce complex gradients that are difficult to remove. We want our image to faithfully represent the astronomical object, and not the local weather conditions!

Transmission graph

Weight graph: Specify image weight cut off.

The image weight is calculated from the (signal to noise ratio)². This is affected by transmission, light pollution and camera noise.

Weight graph

ImageIntegration: Displayed on NSG exit.

On NSG's exit, ImageIntegration is invoked, configured to use NSG's results.

The Normalization is set to 'Local normalization' (In hindsight, I should probably have called NSG 'PhotometricLocalNormalization', but it's probably too late to change its name now). ImageIntegration will use the *.xnml local normalization files that NSG created. These files contain the (brightness) scale factor and gradient correction; ImageIntegration will apply them to the target images.

The 'Weights' is set to 'PSF Scale SNR'. This instructs ImageIntegration to use the weights that NSG calculated and stored within the *.xnml local normalization files.

The target files are added to ImageIntegration in order of decreasing weight. Images that failed either the transmission or weight cutoff criteria are disabled with a 'x'.

ImageIntegration