In the fast-evolving landscape of data recovery, forensic analysis, and storage management, version numbers matter. They signal bug fixes, feature overhauls, and critical performance leaps. One such version that has been creating significant buzz among professionals is x360 4.10.

Whether you are a digital forensics expert, an IT administrator, or a data recovery specialist, understanding the nuances of x360 4.10 is crucial for maximizing your workflow efficiency. This article dives deep into what x360 4.10 offers, how it compares to previous iterations, and why this specific release is a game-changer.

One of the standout features bolstered in 4.10 is Auto-Documentation.

The single biggest driver for the 4.10 update was the emergence of consumer hard drives exceeding 20TB (Seagate’s 22TB IronWolf Pro and WD’s 22TB Gold). Older x360 firmware (e.g., 4.06 or 4.08) would occasionally misreport LBA counts or trigger premature read timeouts on these high-capacity drives.

x360 4.10 introduces:

X360 Recovery for ISVs v4.10 is a specialized disaster recovery module designed to integrate IBM Power Systems (AIX) and IBM i (AS/400) environments into the Veeam Recovery Orchestrator ecosystem.

Prior to v4.10, orchestrating DR for legacy Power Systems was a siloed, often manual process involving complex scripting. Version 4.10 bridged the gap between modern Veeam data protection workflows and legacy infrastructure, allowing organizations to document, test, and orchestrate DR plans for AIX/IBM i within the same interface used for Windows and Linux environments.

Key Value Proposition: Unified DR orchestration, automated compliance documentation, and near-instant recovery testing for IBM Power Systems.


  • Read release notes
  • Compatibility matrix
  • Backup current config
  • Test environment
  • Pre-upgrade checks
  • Sequence
  • Canary
  • Validation
  • Rollback plan