
On 8/20/2011 1:13 AM, Nevin Liber wrote:
On 19 August 2011 21:04, Edward Diener<eldiener@tropicsoft.com> wrote:
I am wondering how others have come by their copies of Intel C++ ?
To repeat my reply to you when you brought this up a month ago:
On 15 July 2011 18:34, Edward Diener<eldiener@tropicsoft.com> wrote:
For TTI I wanted to test Intel C++ but it is not free even though there is a 30-day trial period.
I believe the Intel compiler is free for non-commercial use. Check out< http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/non-commercial-software-development/> for more details.
Is that license not good enough for your purpose?
I do not remember why I ignored your previous reply, and did not remember it when I posted this present message, but thanks for pointing it out to me again. Although I prefer working on Windows rather than Linux, I can certainly use Linux ( I have a slew of them in multi-boot configurations ) and the free non-academic version Intel offers there. Intel does not mention the free, non-academic version of their C++ compiler from their main web page for their compilers or software development tools. makes it hard to find if one does not know about it. Eddie