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Thank you for using Intel® software development tools. We are committed to making the best possible software and platforms to meet your development needs. Your personal experience with our products is extremely valuable to us and we want to know how we can do better. Please share your thoughts by answering the questions below.
1 |
Are you currently using Intel® Integrated Performance Primitives (Intel® IPP) 32-bit library? |
Yes/No |
2 |
If you answered yes, what are some of the applications you’re using Intel® IPP 32-bit library for? |
Please enter use cases/applications |
3 |
When do you plan to move to 64-bit library? |
0 - 6 months |
6 months – 1year |
||
1 – 2 years |
||
No current plans to move |
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1: Yes, but 32 bit is not important, I have two compilers, one for 32 bit, one for 64 bit provided by my IDE...at a certain development state, I compile the code with 32 bit compiler too, just to see what kind of warnings this compilers issues (sometimes different warnings as the 64 bit compiler issues)...this way I can sometimes improve code quality dealing with the warning reasons, however, it is just the "cherry on top", 64-bit IPP library (so far for Windows only) is what we really need for production code.
2: use for extreme computationally intensive applications, but only in between, finally we use 64-bit library
3: we use 64-bit IPP library since many years
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1. Yes
2. Medical image viewing
3. No current plans to abandon 32-bit library
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1) Yes
2) Digital Signal Processing applications for the telecommunications field
3) No current plans to move
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1) Yes
2) Software defined radio, essentially DSP
3) Already supplying 64-bit binaries but have < 1% of users running 32-bit
I can drop the 32-bit users with the next release but will continue to provide support. Losing 32-bit IPP is not the end of the world.
