R-undelete 4.9.build 159222 Portable -x86 X64- ... Info

The inclusion of both x86 and x64 means you can use this tool on a WinPE (Windows Preinstallation Environment) disk. If your computer won't boot, you can boot from a portable Windows USB, launch the x86 version of R-Undelete, and recover data before reinstalling your OS.

One of the frustrations of data recovery is recovering thousands of files with generic names (like .chk or random numbers). R-Undelete 4.9 includes a preview panel that supports standard graphic formats (JPG, PNG, TIFF). This allows users to visually confirm they are recovering the correct family photos before hitting the "Recover" button.

You accidentally Shift+Deleted your "Taxes 2024" folder. By default, Windows cannot recover these. R-Undelete scans the drive, finds the folder marked as "deleted" but still physically present, and restores it to a different drive.

Introduction
R-Undelete is a commercial file-recovery utility developed by R-tools Technology Inc., intended to recover deleted files from various storage media (HDDs, SSDs, USB drives, memory cards) and file systems (NTFS, FAT, exFAT, ReFS). The string "R-Undelete 4.9.Build 159222 Portable -x86 x64-" suggests a specific build/version and a portable distribution compatible with both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows systems. This essay examines what such a package likely contains, its provenance and legitimacy considerations, technical capabilities, risks and legal/ethical issues, and recommendations for safe use. R-Undelete 4.9.Build 159222 Portable -x86 x64- ...

What the package name implies

Technical capabilities (based on R-Undelete product line)

Provenance and legitimacy concerns

Security and privacy implications

Legal and ethical considerations

Best-practice recommendations

Indicators that a package is suspect

Conclusion "R-Undelete 4.9.Build 159222 Portable -x86 x64-" likely denotes a portable, cross-architecture build of a known recovery tool and—if obtained from the vendor—can be a useful utility for retrieving deleted files. However, portable and repacked distributions found outside official channels carry significant security, legal, and ethical risks. Users should prefer official sources, verify integrity (signatures/hashes), run recovery from separate media in a safe environment, and avoid cracked software.

If you want, I can:

  • Click Scan.
  • After scan (may take seconds to hours), expand the found file system under the drive.
  • Navigate folders – deleted files appear with a red cross icon.
  • Preview a file (right-click → Preview) to confirm recoverability.
  • Check the file → click Recover button.
  • Save to a different drive (e.g., external USB). Do not save to the same drive – you risk overwriting.
  • Build numbers like 4.9.Build 159222 are normal for R‑Undelete (released ~2020-2021).
    No major feature difference from newer builds (4.9+). Portable version is stable.

    Warning: Some websites repackage this build with malware. Always verify checksums (SHA-256) from a trusted source (e.g., official R‑TT website or major portals like PortableApps.com). If the ZIP contains .exe launchers with weird names, scan before running.