[29901] in Perl-Users-Digest
Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 1144 Volume: 11
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Thu Jan 3 00:19:35 2008
Date: Wed, 2 Jan 2008 21:19:29 -0800 (PST)
From: Perl-Users Digest <Perl-Users-Request@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU>
To: Perl-Users@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Perl-Users Digest Wed, 2 Jan 2008 Volume: 11 Number: 1144
Today's topics:
M`I'5`Persecutio n - Co mparing t he M I5 Persecuti on iemie@hotmail.com
need help with regular expressions tsahiasher@gmail.com
Re: need help with regular expressions <rvtol+news@isolution.nl>
Re: need help with regular expressions <tadmc@seesig.invalid>
Re: need help with regular expressions <jurgenex@hotmail.com>
Re: need help with regular expressions tsahiasher@gmail.com
Need Help: LibXML + LWP::Simple Is Making Perl Crash <Mott.Jeff@gmail.com>
Re: Need Help: LibXML + LWP::Simple Is Making Perl Cras <ivan@0x4849.net>
new CPAN modules on Mon Dec 24 2007 (Randal Schwartz)
new CPAN modules on Tue Dec 25 2007 (Randal Schwartz)
new CPAN modules on Wed Dec 26 2007 (Randal Schwartz)
Nokia launches N82 - Cute phone with crazy functionalit <rajendra420@yahoo.com>
Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: 26 Dec 2007 08:33:25 GMT
From: iemie@hotmail.com
Subject: M`I'5`Persecutio n - Co mparing t he M I5 Persecuti on with G erman F inal Sol ution
Message-Id: <by0711260833204118@4ax.com>
MI5 Persecution Update: Friday. 16 April, 1999
If You Intend To. Reply, Please Read This
Please.... keep your response to one. page!. Faxes over a page or two will
be deleted without. being read.
BBC newscaster Nicholas. Witchell cant stop himself laughing
During 1990-91 there were very. many instances of "interactive
television" where newscasters and other TV presenters saw. on a screen
before them what was happening in my home, and reacted,. frequently by
laughing at me. During this. period I unfortunately did not record these
programmes. For the last year. or two, I have been recording everything I
watch, and there has. been a drastic decrease in such incidents.
However, on occasion, television presenters do still. engage in
"interactive watching". and react to what they see. This has been evident
with Jon Snow of Channel Four News recently -. a particularly interesting
case, since. it has been established that he cannot be corrupted by money
(it is well-documented that MI5 offered him a tax-free salary. and he
turned them down).. I wonder what device MI5 are using to encourage him to
do. the "interactive watching"?
On Saturday. 10 April 1999 at 7pm, Nicholas Witchell on BBC2 News reacted
when he. saw that I was watching the programme, and I have his reactions
stored safely on videotape.. I have watched this tape several times and I
am entirely confident that my evaluation of. his reactions is correct. For
several minutes his upper lip quivered. in mirth as he attempted to keep a
straight. face. Then finally his self-control evaporated through the excuse
of a weak joke. and his face collapsed into a grin.
The strange thing is that I dont know why he. was laughing at me, what I
had done. recently to "deserve" to be laughed at. The MI5 persecutors
usually manage to. invent some justification as to why people should laugh
at and/or abuse me ("hes an X", "it was so funny" etc),. so Mr Witchell
could. have been laughing for any number of reasons. Perhaps he found the
views I have been expressing in these articles amusing? I. suppose if youre
paid enough money and ordered to laugh then even the most. innocuous thing
becomes. funny.
Jon Snow of Channel Four News cant stop himself. smirking, either.
On 12 February 1999 I was watching Channel Four News. presented by Jon
Snow. As usual, I was recording. the programme, so that if anything out of
the ordinary happened, Id be able to go. back and watch it again.
Now,. Jon Snow, by his own claim, is uncorruptible. He says he turned down
an offer of a substantial tax-free salary from MI5. - they wanted to make
him their mouthpiece, and he told them. where to get off.
So you will be most surprised to learn that. Jon Snow "interactively
watched". me that evening, and on many other evenings. Approximately
fifteen minutes into the. programme, he announced that the US President
would be making a live appearance at about 7.30pm; I looked. at the clock
on the mantelpiece; and. Snow saw me looking at the clock, and visibly
tried. to suppress a smirk.
Uncorruptible, are you, Mister Snow? If not money, then. why are you
watching me, Mister Snow? Are they forcing you to watch. me? Cant you turn
the monitor off, Mister. Snow?
Keith Hill MP (Labour -. Streatham), my elected representative, as ever
refuses to. help.
Comparing the MI5 Persecution with. German "Final Solution"
It might seem offensive to compare the mass murder of. millions of
civilians in. wartime with the peacetime persecution of merely one
person. Yet the comparison has been coursing through. my mind for several
years now, because the brutality of German intent to "sub-humans" is. very
much comparable to the. brutality of British intent to someone they
vituperate and term "not up to British standards". The. methods may differ,
but the. persecutors mindset is the same.
The Germans first targeted the. mentally disabled, too
During WW2 millions of ethnic Russians, Poles, Jews,. mentally ill, gypsies
and other minorities were rounded. up and murdered in purpose-built camps
by the German regime, in the name of "racial superiority".. Fifty years on,
the British Secret Police, MI5,. instituted a campaign of mass
hysteria; but in their cowardice, limited. their activities to one single
victim.
It is instructive to note that the. early German "cleansing" effort was
directed primarily not at Jews, but at the mentally ill. The Nazis. set up
the. T4 project in the thirties to "cleanse" away 70,000 mentally disabled
people, including schizophrenics. and epileptics. After WW2 the Jews with
their media. influence used the reaction from the holocaust to roll back
anti-semitism in the Western countries;. however, the mentally ill are
today still a persecuted group in the modern Western world as. they were
under the Nazis (the. current Jewish home secretary in the UK intends to
bring in laws for incarceration without any criminal charge. for some
mentally ill. people - he protects his own minority, but does nothing for
the other minorities. in todays society), and this continuing bias forms a
central cause for the current acts of persecution in the. UK.
Widespread knowledge of what is happening to the. "un-British" minority
In both the German persecution of the thirties and early. forties, and the
current. British persecution, many, many people are well aware of whats
happening. There. is widespread complicity through inaction of
populace; and in. a substantial proportion of the mainstread population,
the persecution had/has. widespread enthusiastic support; yet in both the
German case in the 1940s and the British. today, the existence of
persecution is a mass secret which must be never. admitted out loud. In the
recent Lawrence case this "secret. bigotry" has been termed
"institutionalised racism",. and that is a very good word for what the
British are doing today The. persecutory attitudes and omerta regarding
them are so deeply. ingrained in the national psyche that they define the
national. mood
During WW2 many Germans knew. minorities were disappearing, and through
inaction quietly condoned their government's. mass murder of
"un-German" minorities and inferior "foreigners"; and in the. 1990s,
similarly, many English people know what the. MI5 British Secret Police
have been doing, and not only. condone it, but actively take part, because
of xenophobia against the "un-British". unit minority that is the target of
"British" actions.. This attitude by the British persecutors has been made
explicit through the words. "he's not up to British standards"; the British
seem to have. found their very own "untermenschen" to victimise.
Why these obsessive "holy wars". happen
This type of aggression. occurs when the majority is threatened or
humiliated in some way, economically, militarily or. culturally. In pre-WW2
Germany the threat was primarily economic. and military, following
Germany's humiliating defeat in the first world war and the reparations. it
was forced to pay. In modern Britain, one. might guess that the majority
English who are behind the persecution feel pressured by. the swiftly
diminishing status of Britain in the world, and the rapidly. increasing
coloured colonisation of their country, which in time will. see the ethnic
English a minority in their own land,. and their more antisocial elements,
unable to reply to the. obvious threat, instead project their aggression
onto another,. weaker, unit minority
In both cases there. is a whiff of "holy war" or irrational obsession with
the persecution. Certainly the German. behaviour fifty years ago bordered
on the not-quite-sane, and the. current British behaviour towards their
chosen victim is strongly tinged with a leave-taking of. reason. And the
choices open to. the victims are the same, since MI5 will never allow me to
escape them,. "if he tries to run away we'll find him", just like the
commandant of Auschwitz telling the new arrivals,. "the only escape is
through the. chimney".
The Victim Will. Destroy Us if We Dont Destroy Him First
The persecutors propaganda is. the same. Fifty years ago the Germans said,
"if we don't. do it to the Jews then the Jews will do it to us"; and MI5's
propaganda in the early nineties concentrated on their victim as. a
"monster". aesome "untermenschen" minority.
"We are decent fellows" say the. Brutal Persecutors
During the course of researching this article I read. part of the very
interesting book, "Hitler - A Study in Tyranny",. by Alan Bullock. This
volume contains a quote from Himmler. on the "Final Solution";
"Most of you know what it means when. a hundred corpses are lying side by
side,. or five hundred or one thousand. To have stuck it out, and at the
same time .... to have remained decent fellows, that is what has made. us
hard. This is a page of glory. in our history which has never been written
and is never to. be written."
In the MI5 persecution, too,. there is a thread of deliberate brutality to
the sick. and vulnerable, while the persecutors maintain that "we are
decent fellows". There is almost. a conscious schizophrenia in the
self-attitudes of the Security Service operatives and those in the. public
who they employ against me,. which reflects the contradiction evident in
the German attitude above. On the one hand, they stoop to the lowest. and
most base behaviour; yet at the same time, the MI5 operatives. tell
themselves that since they. are civilised British people, then surely they
must. by definition be "decent fellows". Any indecency is made the fault of
the victim;. "hes making us persecute him, so we need feel no guilt".
Yet the conduct is atypical of the way these peoples see. their normal
modes of behaviour.. Befslaughter was not typical of normal German
behaviour up to that point. Similarly, the current MI5 abuse goes. against
the grain of British self-image as being "reserved". and "decent", since
they are using terms of abuse which. are common among blacks and other
supposedly less-developed races, but. not among the English.
Conclusion
The. ultimate aim of both persecutions is the humiliation and physical
extinction of. the persecuted group. The Germans did this in a very direct
way;. the British Secret Police MI5 are acting indirectly and relying on
self-extinction of their target,. because in peacetime and in the current
somewhat false. climate of "political correctness" more direct methods are
impossible.. If MI5 undertook more direct action the mass "omerta" would be
broken.
I have written this. article with sincerity to show how a historically
recent. persecution in another country parallels what is being done in this
country today. In both cases,. the evil-doers are of their countries
establishments, and rely. on widespread tacit support to maintain the
persecution. and omerta around it. While the holocaust was undoubtedly the
greater evil,. it is important to be aware of the fact that had the Germans
not been defeated fifty years ago, their plans would. have gone through to
total completion. In Britain today no. force threatens the "permanent
government" of which the Security Service forms a part; and it. looks very
unlikely that the wrongs perpetrated by the MI5. secret police will ever be
revealed to public view,. and the British secret state brought to justice
for its. evil actions.
465
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 00:53:59 -0800 (PST)
From: tsahiasher@gmail.com
Subject: need help with regular expressions
Message-Id: <3b3fd486-a1ff-4042-9490-a0d5f98c68fa@x69g2000hsx.googlegroups.com>
hi,
i need the correct regular expression to set the unnamed variable $1
to any of "FantasyMFG", "Fantasy.NET", or "FantasyACC" in the
following path:
FantasyMFG/tags/2.1.16
(where "FantasyMFG" may be replaced with any of the others)
this is for a system we are using. i've been battling this for a while
now, but there's a limit to how much time i can dedicate for this.
thanks,
tsahi
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 10:18:47 +0100
From: "Dr.Ruud" <rvtol+news@isolution.nl>
Subject: Re: need help with regular expressions
Message-Id: <fko1b5.ko.1@news.isolution.nl>
tsahiasher@gmail.com schreef:
> i need the correct regular expression to set the unnamed variable $1
> to any of "FantasyMFG", "Fantasy.NET", or "FantasyACC" in the
> following path:
>
> FantasyMFG/tags/2.1.16
>
> (where "FantasyMFG" may be replaced with any of the others)
>
> this is for a system we are using. i've been battling this for a while
> now, but there's a limit to how much time i can dedicate for this.
So what have you tried sofar?
(show minimal but complete code, that we can run)
Maybe this helps:
/(Fantasy(?:MFG|\.NET|ACC))/
--
Affijn, Ruud
"Gewoon is een tijger."
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 08:04:38 -0600
From: Tad J McClellan <tadmc@seesig.invalid>
Subject: Re: need help with regular expressions
Message-Id: <slrnfmvf3m.pq9.tadmc@tadmc30.sbcglobal.net>
tsahiasher@gmail.com <tsahiasher@gmail.com> wrote:
> i need the correct regular expression to set the unnamed variable $1
$1 has a name. It's name is "dollar one".
--
Tad McClellan
email: perl -le "print scalar reverse qq/moc.noitatibaher\100cmdat/"
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 19:13:53 GMT
From: Jürgen Exner <jurgenex@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: need help with regular expressions
Message-Id: <5210n3lk41rmlv1dv4t6eiq0vfuuegsd0d@4ax.com>
tsahiasher@gmail.com wrote:
>i need the correct regular expression to set the unnamed variable $1
>to any of "FantasyMFG", "Fantasy.NET", or "FantasyACC" in the
>following path:
>
>FantasyMFG/tags/2.1.16
>
>(where "FantasyMFG" may be replaced with any of the others)
Well, does it really have to be a RE and $1? It would be much easier and
probably faster to use a simple
(split '/', 'FantasyMFG/tags/2.1.16')[0];
instead.
jue
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2007 08:09:46 -0800 (PST)
From: tsahiasher@gmail.com
Subject: Re: need help with regular expressions
Message-Id: <e2dfd95e-4f33-41e5-8b59-773b72b202a1@i3g2000hsf.googlegroups.com>
On Dec 24, 11:18 am, "Dr.Ruud" <rvtol+n...@isolution.nl> wrote:
> tsahias...@gmail.com schreef:
>
> > i need the correct regular expression to set the unnamed variable $1
> > to any of "FantasyMFG", "Fantasy.NET", or "FantasyACC" in the
> > following path:
>
> > FantasyMFG/tags/2.1.16
>
> > (where "FantasyMFG" may be replaced with any of the others)
>
> > this is for a system we are using. i've been battling this for a while
> > now, but there's a limit to how much time i can dedicate for this.
>
> So what have you tried sofar?
> (show minimal but complete code, that we can run)
>
this isn't for my code. it's for a config file of a Perl program i'm
using (Scmbug, if you are familiar with it). so far i tried
Fantasy[\s\.\w]+ (seems to work, but the Scmbug developer said "it
won't set the $1 unamed variable")
(Fantasy.+?)/ and (.+?)/ (for some reason Scmbug took these literaly
and not as REs)
> Maybe this helps:
>
> /(Fantasy(?:MFG|\.NET|ACC))/
>
i'll try that and see if it works.
Tsahi
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2007 20:24:54 -0800 (PST)
From: "Jeff.M" <Mott.Jeff@gmail.com>
Subject: Need Help: LibXML + LWP::Simple Is Making Perl Crash
Message-Id: <ec5cc0af-e0bf-4074-a2ab-a4aba3721776@a35g2000prf.googlegroups.com>
I've been getting a very weird bug. No error message. perl simply
crashes. With lots of trial and error, I've narrowed down the parts
that cause the crash. Below is some very simple code that -- on my
WinXP comp with ActivePerl 5.8.8 -- will crash reliably.
use strict;
use warnings FATAL => 'all';
use XML::LibXML;
use LWP::Simple;
# The XML structure...
# <myroot>
# <somenode>
# <somedeepernode>Hello, World!</somedeepernode>
# </somenode>
# </myroot>
my $rootNode = XML::LibXML::Element->new('myroot');
my $someNode = XML::LibXML::Element->new('somenode');
$rootNode->appendChild($someNode);
my $someDeeperNode = XML::LibXML::Element->new('somedeepernode');
$someDeeperNode->appendText('Hello, World!');
$someNode->appendChild($someDeeperNode);
my @someNodes = $rootNode->getElementsByTagName('somenode');
foreach my $someNode (@someNodes)
{
# If this line is commented, then all is good.
# But if it's left in... crash.
my $theText = $someNode->findvalue('somedeepernode');
# This line -- a different way to accomplish
# the same thing -- would crash too.
# my $theText = $someNode->getElementsByTagName('somedeepernode')-
>get_node(1)->nodeValue;
}
# Or if this line is commented, then all is good also. But because
I've had
# other weirdness with getting text from XML nodes, I'm leaning toward
LibXML
# being the culprit.
my $x = get('http://www.perl.com');
print q`If you're reading this, then it worked!`;
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2007 21:30:15 -0800 (PST)
From: Ivan Novick <ivan@0x4849.net>
Subject: Re: Need Help: LibXML + LWP::Simple Is Making Perl Crash
Message-Id: <7ab9ab71-51e0-4fb1-8bb7-c041ba55c790@b40g2000prf.googlegroups.com>
On Dec 25, 8:24 pm, "Jeff.M" <Mott.J...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've been getting a very weird bug. No error message. perl simply
> crashes. With lots of trial and error, I've narrowed down the parts
> that cause the crash. Below is some very simple code that -- on my
> WinXP comp with ActivePerl 5.8.8 -- will crash reliably.
>
> use strict;
> use warnings FATAL => 'all';
>
> use XML::LibXML;
> use LWP::Simple;
-- snip --
There are clearly issues/bugs with XML::LibXML.
I have run your program via valgrind memory profiler on a debian
system with perl 5.8 and there are numerous illegal memory usages
coming from the LibXML library.
Here is an example:
==2253== Invalid read of size 4
==2253== at 0x48338E6: domXPathFind (in /usr/lib/perl5/auto/XML/
LibXML/LibXML.so)
==2253== by 0x4814705: XS_XML__LibXML__Node__find (in /usr/lib/
perl5/auto/XML/LibXML/LibXML.so)
==2253== by 0x80BDAC0: Perl_pp_entersub (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== by 0x80BC398: Perl_runops_standard (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== by 0x8063BFC: perl_run (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== by 0x805FFD0: main (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== Address 0x476C534 is 20 bytes inside a block of size 88
free'd
==2253== at 0x401CFA5: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:233)
==2253== by 0x44093D6: xmlFreeDoc (in /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2.6.27)
==2253== by 0x483388D: domXPathFind (in /usr/lib/perl5/auto/XML/
LibXML/LibXML.so)
==2253== by 0x483393A: domXPathSelect (in /usr/lib/perl5/auto/XML/
LibXML/LibXML.so)
==2253== by 0x48141D6: XS_XML__LibXML__Node__findnodes (in /usr/lib/
perl5/auto/XML/LibXML/LibXML.so)
==2253== by 0x80BDAC0: Perl_pp_entersub (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== by 0x80BC398: Perl_runops_standard (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== by 0x8063BFC: perl_run (in /usr/bin/perl)
==2253== by 0x805FFD0: main (in /usr/bin/perl)
I would recommend using another module for XML handling and submitting
a bug to the maintainer of this package.
Regards,
Ivan Novick
http://www.0x4849.net
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 05:42:17 GMT
From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal Schwartz)
Subject: new CPAN modules on Mon Dec 24 2007
Message-Id: <JtJH6H.1zw5@zorch.sf-bay.org>
The following modules have recently been added to or updated in the
Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). You can install them using the
instructions in the 'perlmodinstall' page included with your Perl
distribution.
Acme-emcA-0.10E0
http://search.cpan.org/~audreyt/Acme-emcA-0.10E0/
Acme::emcA
----
Algorithm-FEC-1.0
http://search.cpan.org/~mlehmann/Algorithm-FEC-1.0/
Forward Error Correction using Vandermonde Matrices
----
Algorithm-OpenFST-0.01_01
http://search.cpan.org/~seano/Algorithm-OpenFST-0.01_01/
----
C-Analyzer-0.10
http://search.cpan.org/~sreekanth/C-Analyzer-0.10/
C Static source code analyzer module, Currently generates only Call Stack
----
CGI-Ex-2.23
http://search.cpan.org/~rhandom/CGI-Ex-2.23/
CGI utility suite - makes powerful application writing fun and easy
----
CPANPLUS-Shell-Default-Plugins-Prereqs-0.03_01
http://search.cpan.org/~mgrimes/CPANPLUS-Shell-Default-Plugins-Prereqs-0.03_01/
----
CSS-DOM-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~sprout/CSS-DOM-0.01/
Document Object Model for Cascading Style Sheets
----
CatalystX-Starter-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~jrockway/CatalystX-Starter-0.05/
bootstrap a CPAN-able Catalyst component
----
Chess-ChessKit-ChessKit-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~chesskit/Chess-ChessKit-ChessKit-0.05/
----
Convert-Binary-C-0.70
http://search.cpan.org/~mhx/Convert-Binary-C-0.70/
Binary Data Conversion using C Types
----
Device-Modem-GSM-0.1
http://search.cpan.org/~skattoor/Device-Modem-GSM-0.1/
Perl module to communicate with a GSM cell phone connected via some sort of Serial port.
----
Email-Folder-0.854
http://search.cpan.org/~rjbs/Email-Folder-0.854/
read all the messages from a folder as Email::Simple objects.
----
HTML-DOM-0.010
http://search.cpan.org/~sprout/HTML-DOM-0.010/
A Perl implementation of the HTML Document Object Model
----
JE-0.020
http://search.cpan.org/~sprout/JE-0.020/
Pure-Perl ECMAScript (JavaScript) Engine
----
LaTeX-Pod-0.15
http://search.cpan.org/~schubiger/LaTeX-Pod-0.15/
Transform LaTeX source files to POD (Plain old documentation)
----
Net-AIML-0.0.5
http://search.cpan.org/~perigrin/Net-AIML-0.0.5/
Perl interface to the Pandorabots.com AIML server
----
Net-Appliance-Session-0.18
http://search.cpan.org/~oliver/Net-Appliance-Session-0.18/
Run command-line sessions to network appliances
----
Net-FCP-1.1
http://search.cpan.org/~mlehmann/Net-FCP-1.1/
http://freenet.sf.net client protocol
----
Net-SMS-BulkSMS-1.02
http://search.cpan.org/~pedwards/Net-SMS-BulkSMS-1.02/
send SMS messages via provider bulksms.co.uk
----
Parse-Marpa-0.001_062
http://search.cpan.org/~jkegl/Parse-Marpa-0.001_062/
(pre-Alpha) Jay Earley's general parsing algorithm, with LR(0) precomputation
----
Perl6-Bible-0.32
http://search.cpan.org/~lichtkind/Perl6-Bible-0.32/
Perl 6 Design Documentations
----
Proc-Fork-0.6
http://search.cpan.org/~aristotle/Proc-Fork-0.6/
Simple, intuitive interface to the fork() system call
----
Proc-Fork-0.61
http://search.cpan.org/~aristotle/Proc-Fork-0.61/
Simple, intuitive interface to the fork() system call
----
RT-Client-REST-0.32
http://search.cpan.org/~dmitri/RT-Client-REST-0.32/
talk to RT installation using REST protocol.
----
Spreadsheet-Engine-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~tmtm/Spreadsheet-Engine-0.06/
Core calculation engine for a spreadsheet
----
Text-Darts-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~dankogai/Text-Darts-0.02/
Perl interface to DARTS by Taku Kudoh
----
Text-Darts-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~dankogai/Text-Darts-0.03/
Perl interface to DARTS by Taku Kudoh
----
Text-Template-Simple-0.49_11
http://search.cpan.org/~burak/Text-Template-Simple-0.49_11/
Simple text template engine
----
Tree-BPTree-1.08
http://search.cpan.org/~hanenkamp/Tree-BPTree-1.08/
Perl implementation of B+ trees
----
Unix-Mknod-0.04
http://search.cpan.org/~pirzyk/Unix-Mknod-0.04/
Perl extension for mknod, major, minor, and makedev
----
WWW-Mechanize-Plugin-JavaScript-0.002
http://search.cpan.org/~sprout/WWW-Mechanize-Plugin-JavaScript-0.002/
JavaScript plugin for WWW::Mechanize
----
XML-Compile-Dumper-0.10
http://search.cpan.org/~markov/XML-Compile-Dumper-0.10/
Translate Schema or WSDL to code
----
XML-FeedPP-0.32
http://search.cpan.org/~kawasaki/XML-FeedPP-0.32/
Parse/write/merge/edit RSS/RDF/Atom syndication feeds
If you're an author of one of these modules, please submit a detailed
announcement to comp.lang.perl.announce, and we'll pass it along.
This message was generated by a Perl program described in my Linux
Magazine column, which can be found on-line (along with more than
200 other freely available past column articles) at
http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col82.html
print "Just another Perl hacker," # the original
--
Randal L. Schwartz - Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc. - +1 503 777 0095
<merlyn@stonehenge.com> <URL:http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/>
Perl/Unix/security consulting, Technical writing, Comedy, etc. etc.
See PerlTraining.Stonehenge.com for onsite and open-enrollment Perl training!
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2007 05:42:15 GMT
From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal Schwartz)
Subject: new CPAN modules on Tue Dec 25 2007
Message-Id: <JtLBuF.1s03@zorch.sf-bay.org>
The following modules have recently been added to or updated in the
Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). You can install them using the
instructions in the 'perlmodinstall' page included with your Perl
distribution.
App-Build-0.70
http://search.cpan.org/~mbarbon/App-Build-0.70/
extends Module::Build to build/install/configure entire applications (i.e. web applications), not just modules and programs
----
Archive-Tar-1.38
http://search.cpan.org/~kane/Archive-Tar-1.38/
module for manipulations of tar archives
----
Bundle-Perl6-0.11
http://search.cpan.org/~marcel/Bundle-Perl6-0.11/
A bundle to install Perl6-related modules
----
CGP-CLI-2.7.2
http://search.cpan.org/~jbuhacoff/CGP-CLI-2.7.2/
----
CPANPLUS-0.84
http://search.cpan.org/~kane/CPANPLUS-0.84/
API & CLI access to the CPAN mirrors
----
Cache-FastMmap-Tie-0.01_01
http://search.cpan.org/~suzuki/Cache-FastMmap-Tie-0.01_01/
Using Cache::FastMmap as hash
----
Class-Component-0.10
http://search.cpan.org/~yappo/Class-Component-0.10/
pluggable component framework
----
Class-DBI-Sweet-0.09
http://search.cpan.org/~phred/Class-DBI-Sweet-0.09/
Making sweet things sweeter
----
DBIx-Class-Journal-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~jrobinson/DBIx-Class-Journal-0.01/
auditing for tables managed by DBIx::Class
----
Data-Utilities-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~cornelis/Data-Utilities-0.01/
General utilities for nested perl data structures.
----
DateTime-Format-Natural-0.64
http://search.cpan.org/~schubiger/DateTime-Format-Natural-0.64/
Create machine readable date/time with natural parsing logic
----
Devel-Events-0.04
http://search.cpan.org/~nuffin/Devel-Events-0.04/
Extensible instrumentation framework.
----
Devel-Events-Objects-0.04
http://search.cpan.org/~nuffin/Devel-Events-Objects-0.04/
Object tracking support for Devel::Events
----
Devel-PerlySense-0.0138
http://search.cpan.org/~johanl/Devel-PerlySense-0.0138/
IntelliSense for Perl
----
File-Fetch-0.14
http://search.cpan.org/~kane/File-Fetch-0.14/
A generic file fetching mechanism
----
Google-Chart-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~marcel/Google-Chart-0.03/
Draw a chart with Google Chart
----
Infobot-0.91_04
http://search.cpan.org/~sargie/Infobot-0.91_04/
Developer's Overview
----
Net-MRIM-0.8
http://search.cpan.org/~aau/Net-MRIM-0.8/
Perl implementation of mail.ru agent protocol
----
POE-Filter-IRCD-2.34
http://search.cpan.org/~bingos/POE-Filter-IRCD-2.34/
A POE-based parser for the IRC protocol.
----
Parse-Marpa-0.001_063
http://search.cpan.org/~jkegl/Parse-Marpa-0.001_063/
(pre-Alpha) Jay Earley's general parsing algorithm, with LR(0) precomputation
----
PathTools-3.2501
http://search.cpan.org/~kwilliams/PathTools-3.2501/
----
Perl6-Doc-0.32_01
http://search.cpan.org/~lichtkind/Perl6-Doc-0.32_01/
all useful Perl 6 Docs in your command line
----
STAFService-0.21
http://search.cpan.org/~semuelf/STAFService-0.21/
Perl extension for writing STAF Services easily.
----
Sdict-3.0
http://search.cpan.org/~swaj/Sdict-3.0/
Module to work with Sdictionary .dct files
----
String-CaseProfile-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~enell/String-CaseProfile-0.03/
Get/Set the letter case profile of a string
----
Swarmage-0.01000_02
http://search.cpan.org/~dmaki/Swarmage-0.01000_02/
A Distributed Job Queue
----
Tie-RefHash-Weak-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~nuffin/Tie-RefHash-Weak-0.08/
A Tie::RefHash subclass with weakened references in the keys.
----
WebService-OkiLab-ExtractPlace-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~tsukamoto/WebService-OkiLab-ExtractPlace-0.02/
Perl interface to the OkiLab ExtractPlace web service
If you're an author of one of these modules, please submit a detailed
announcement to comp.lang.perl.announce, and we'll pass it along.
This message was generated by a Perl program described in my Linux
Magazine column, which can be found on-line (along with more than
200 other freely available past column articles) at
http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col82.html
print "Just another Perl hacker," # the original
--
Randal L. Schwartz - Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc. - +1 503 777 0095
<merlyn@stonehenge.com> <URL:http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/>
Perl/Unix/security consulting, Technical writing, Comedy, etc. etc.
See PerlTraining.Stonehenge.com for onsite and open-enrollment Perl training!
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 26 Dec 2007 05:42:15 GMT
From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal Schwartz)
Subject: new CPAN modules on Wed Dec 26 2007
Message-Id: <Jtn6IF.1LE7@zorch.sf-bay.org>
The following modules have recently been added to or updated in the
Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). You can install them using the
instructions in the 'perlmodinstall' page included with your Perl
distribution.
App-Build-0.71
http://search.cpan.org/~mbarbon/App-Build-0.71/
extends Module::Build to build/install/configure entire applications (i.e. web applications), not just modules and programs
----
Archive-Lha-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~ishigaki/Archive-Lha-0.02/
extract .LZH archives
----
B-Lint-Pluggable-2.0
http://search.cpan.org/~jjore/B-Lint-Pluggable-2.0/
Adds plugin support to B::Lint
----
BDB-1.42
http://search.cpan.org/~mlehmann/BDB-1.42/
Asynchronous Berkeley DB access
----
CFPlus-0.9960
http://search.cpan.org/~mlehmann/CFPlus-0.9960/
undocumented utility garbage for our crossfire client
----
Catalyst-Model-HTML-FormFu-1.00000_01
http://search.cpan.org/~dmaki/Catalyst-Model-HTML-FormFu-1.00000_01/
FormFu In Your Model
----
Class-Hookable-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~nyarla/Class-Hookable-0.05/
Base class for hook mechanism
----
Data-Visitor-0.10
http://search.cpan.org/~nuffin/Data-Visitor-0.10/
Visitor style traversal of Perl data structures
----
Devel-OptreeDiff-2.0
http://search.cpan.org/~jjore/Devel-OptreeDiff-2.0/
Produces diffs of optrees
----
Devel-PerlySense-0.0139
http://search.cpan.org/~johanl/Devel-PerlySense-0.0139/
IntelliSense for Perl
----
Device-Modem-GSM-0.2
http://search.cpan.org/~skattoor/Device-Modem-GSM-0.2/
Perl module to communicate with a GSM cell phone connected via some sort of Serial port.
----
Device-Modem-GSM-0.3
http://search.cpan.org/~skattoor/Device-Modem-GSM-0.3/
Perl module to communicate with a GSM cell phone connected via some sort of Serial port (including but not limited to most USB data cables, IrDA, ... others ?).
----
Enbugger-1.00
http://search.cpan.org/~jjore/Enbugger-1.00/
Enables the debugger at runtime.
----
Enbugger-1.01
http://search.cpan.org/~jjore/Enbugger-1.01/
Enables the debugger at runtime.
----
Error-0.17011
http://search.cpan.org/~shlomif/Error-0.17011/
Error/exception handling in an OO-ish way
----
FCGI-Spawn-0.11
http://search.cpan.org/~veresc/FCGI-Spawn-0.11/
process manager/application server for FastCGI protocol.
----
Gungho-0.09006_01
http://search.cpan.org/~dmaki/Gungho-0.09006_01/
Yet Another High Performance Web Crawler Framework
----
Infobot-0.91_05
http://search.cpan.org/~sargie/Infobot-0.91_05/
Developer's Overview
----
JSON-2.02
http://search.cpan.org/~makamaka/JSON-2.02/
JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) encoder/decoder
----
POE-Component-SimpleDBI-1.18
http://search.cpan.org/~apocal/POE-Component-SimpleDBI-1.18/
Asynchronous non-blocking DBI calls in POE made simple
----
Perl6-Doc-0.32_02
http://search.cpan.org/~lichtkind/Perl6-Doc-0.32_02/
all useful Perl 6 Docs in your command line
----
Perl6-Doc-0.32_03
http://search.cpan.org/~lichtkind/Perl6-Doc-0.32_03/
all useful Perl 6 Docs in your command line
----
Perl6-Doc-0.32_04
http://search.cpan.org/~lichtkind/Perl6-Doc-0.32_04/
all useful Perl 6 Docs in your command line
----
Pod-HtmlEasy-0.0911
http://search.cpan.org/~gleach/Pod-HtmlEasy-0.0911/
Generate personalized HTML from PODs.
----
SVK-v2.0.99_991
http://search.cpan.org/~clkao/SVK-v2.0.99_991/
A Distributed Version Control System
----
Swarmage-0.01000_03
http://search.cpan.org/~dmaki/Swarmage-0.01000_03/
A Distributed Job Queue
----
Test-Pod-Content-v0.0.2
http://search.cpan.org/~mkutter/Test-Pod-Content-v0.0.2/
Test a Pod's content
----
autobox-Encode-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~tokuhirom/autobox-Encode-0.01/
Encode with autobox
----
underscore-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~dankogai/underscore-0.01/
outlaws global $_
If you're an author of one of these modules, please submit a detailed
announcement to comp.lang.perl.announce, and we'll pass it along.
This message was generated by a Perl program described in my Linux
Magazine column, which can be found on-line (along with more than
200 other freely available past column articles) at
http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col82.html
print "Just another Perl hacker," # the original
--
Randal L. Schwartz - Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc. - +1 503 777 0095
<merlyn@stonehenge.com> <URL:http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/>
Perl/Unix/security consulting, Technical writing, Comedy, etc. etc.
See PerlTraining.Stonehenge.com for onsite and open-enrollment Perl training!
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 09:15:47 -0800 (PST)
From: "rajendra420@yahoo.com" <rajendra420@yahoo.com>
Subject: Nokia launches N82 - Cute phone with crazy functionalities
Message-Id: <d9ba5fee-9c93-4b77-b2a2-9251a0d9df78@i29g2000prf.googlegroups.com>
http://techntrick.blogspot.com/2007/12/nokia-launches-n82-cute-phone-with.html
http://techntrick.blogspot.com/2007/12/nokia-launches-n82-cute-phone-with.html
Nokia has added yet another smartphone to its already rich N-series
family. Dubbed as N82, the smartphone is regarded as the successor of
N95, although the features of both the gadgets are more or less same.
The only difference you can mark in the latest addition, is change in
design. In any case, Nokia release is always a big event for media.
http://techntrick.blogspot.com/2007/12/nokia-launches-n82-cute-phone-with.html
http://techntrick.blogspot.com/2007/12/nokia-launches-n82-cute-phone-with.html
------------------------------
Date: 6 Apr 2001 21:33:47 GMT (Last modified)
From: Perl-Users-Request@ruby.oce.orst.edu (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)
Subject: Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01)
Message-Id: <null>
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------------------------------
End of Perl-Users Digest V11 Issue 1144
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