From scottp at dd.com.au Thu Sep 5 21:26:28 2002 From: scottp at dd.com.au (Scott Penrose) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Interesting. Perl Meetup Message-ID: <0C9233AA-C140-11D6-AB0F-003065B58CF8@dd.com.au> http://perl.meetup.com/ ?country=1062&setLocale=0&localeId=861&zip=&=continue What I find interesting is to see that there is already three locations chosen in Perl Meetup which means people must be joining. If nothing else we should attend to tell everyone about Perl Mongers :-) Anyone want to come ? Scott Begin forwarded message: > From: pudge@perl.org > Date: Fri Sep 6, 2002 12:00:27 Australia/Melbourne > To: scottp@dd.com.au > Subject: [use Perl] Stories for 2002-09-06 > > use Perl Daily Newsletter > > In this issue: > * Perl "Meetup" > > +--------------------------------------------------------------------+ > | Perl "Meetup" | > | posted by ziggy on Thursday September 05, @19:12 (news) | > | http://use.perl.org/article.pl?sid=02/09/05/2316234 | > +--------------------------------------------------------------------+ > > [0]davorg writes "The people at [1]Meetup have set up a [2]Perl Meetup. > The first one takes place on September 19th. I'll probably go along to > the one in London to see what happens, but I'd be very interested in > hearing any opinions on what this achieves that the existing Perl > Mongers > groups don't." > > Discuss this story at: > http://use.perl.org/comments.pl?sid=02/09/05/2316234 > > Links: > 0. mailto:dave@dave.org.uk > 1. http://www.meetup.com/ > 2. http://perl.meetup.com/ > > > > Copyright 1997-2002 pudge. All rights reserved. > > > ====================================================================== > > You have received this message because you subscribed to it > on use Perl. To stop receiving this and other > messages from use Perl, or to add more messages > or change your preferences, please go to your user page. > > http://use.perl.org/my/messages/ > > You can log in and change your preferences from there. > > > -- Scott Penrose Welcome to the Digital Dimension http://www.dd.com.au/ scottp@dd.com.au Dismaimer: Contents of this mail and signature are bound to change randomly. Whilst every attempt has been made to control said randomness, the author wishes to remain blameless for the number of eggs that damn chicken laid. Oh and I don't want to hear about butterflies either. From ts at meme.com.au Thu Sep 5 23:42:44 2002 From: ts at meme.com.au (Tony Smith) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Interesting. Perl Meetup In-Reply-To: <0C9233AA-C140-11D6-AB0F-003065B58CF8@dd.com.au> References: <0C9233AA-C140-11D6-AB0F-003065B58CF8@dd.com.au> Message-ID: >What I find interesting is to see that there is already three >locations chosen in Perl Meetup which means people must be joining. I've been to both the first two Melbourne Slashdot Meetups. There are more signed up for Slashdot in Melbourne than they are claiming for Perl in the whole world, which is sad and I suspect not an entirely accurate reflection of the respective target audiences. It also appears that the Meetup crew are slow learners, especially when it comes to anything outside the US. They have still listed Bliss as one of the three choices for Perl a couple of months after the Slashdot crew discovered that Bliss doesn't open its doors till 8:30 ... not much use for a strangely American 7:00 pm start. >If nothing else we should attend to tell everyone about Perl Mongers :-) And maybe more than "everybody", seeing as this sample of one who would like to have stayed more involved with Perl Mongers somehow managed to gain the impression that MelbournePM had disappeared for the last year of so. >Anyone want to come ? I'm game for almost anything. Sometimes the less the better. -- Tony Smith Developer TransForum http://www.transforum.net/ From gblist at excite.com Fri Sep 6 00:12:26 2002 From: gblist at excite.com (Greg) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: No subject Message-ID: <20020906051226.C5232B708@xmxpita.excite.com> Hi Guys I am running Activeperl 5.6 on a PC. and I have added a couple of extra modules via PPM3. I am struggling to add the Date::MySQL module, as it is apparenty not available as a PPM. I installed nmake and went through the following steps which seemed to complete ok. perl Makefile.PL nmake nmake test nmake install The line:use Date::MySQL; Results in: cant locate date/mysql.pm in @INCAny help appreciated. Greg ------------------------------------------------ Changed your e-mail? Keep your contacts! Use this free e-mail change of address service from Return Path. Register now! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020906/e5170e05/attachment.htm From Builders at ee.wits.ac.za Fri Sep 6 13:44:49 2002 From: Builders at ee.wits.ac.za (Debt Fix) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Notice: New Service Can Eliminate 60% of Your Debt! Message-ID: <000056771c8d$00001c7d$000028ce@ebs.up.ac.za> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020905/17eaf8fd/attachment.htm From pjf at perltraining.com.au Mon Sep 9 19:46:34 2002 From: pjf at perltraining.com.au (Paul Fenwick) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Meeting Reminder Message-ID: <20020910004634.GD29122@mukc.org.au> G'day Everyone, Just a quick reminder that the next Perl Monger's meeting will be TOMORROW, Wednesday the 11th of September. Our speakers will be: * David Dick, "Finance::Bank::Commowealth". That's right folks, now you can run your bank accounts from Perl. :) * Paul Fenwick, "What's new in Perl 5.8.0". WHERE: myinternet house Level 8 14 Blackwood St North Melbourne WHEN: 6:30pm Don't forget that you can come a little early to hone your hacky-sack skills. ;) Cheers, Paul -- Paul Fenwick | http://perltraining.com.au/ Director of Training | Ph: +61 3 9354 6001 Perl Training Australia | Fax: +61 3 9354 2681 From scottp at dd.com.au Mon Sep 9 19:58:14 2002 From: scottp at dd.com.au (Scott Penrose) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Perl in the Age Message-ID: <62A8FE3B-C458-11D6-AB0F-003065B58CF8@dd.com.au> Hey Dudes, Paul and I feature (scarily) on page two of the IT Age today, advertising the Melbourne Perl Mongers. Lots of stuff about camels, and a little bit about perl :-) all together not bad, hopefully a little advocacy for our group. I hope that our picture does not frighten them off, because DAMN we are scary. Scott -- Scott Penrose Welcome to the Digital Dimension http://www.dd.com.au/ scottp@dd.com.au Dismaimer: Contents of this mail and signature are bound to change randomly. Whilst every attempt has been made to control said randomness, the author wishes to remain blameless for the number of eggs that damn chicken laid. Oh and I don't want to hear about butterflies either. From scottp at dd.com.au Mon Sep 9 20:02:23 2002 From: scottp at dd.com.au (Scott Penrose) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Meeting Reminder In-Reply-To: <20020910004634.GD29122@mukc.org.au> Message-ID: Reminder also that we have: - Books available - growing in number all the time (those who have borrowed them, don't forget to return them) - O'Reilly discount vouchers. - Impromptu talks on the hot topic of the day (whatever that may be) - And of course dinner at the Pub :-) See you tomorrow. Scott On Tuesday, Sep 10, 2002, at 10:46 Australia/Melbourne, Paul Fenwick wrote: > G'day Everyone, > > Just a quick reminder that the next Perl Monger's meeting > will be TOMORROW, Wednesday the 11th of September. Our speakers > will be: > > * David Dick, "Finance::Bank::Commowealth". That's right folks, > now you can run your bank accounts from Perl. :) > > * Paul Fenwick, "What's new in Perl 5.8.0". > > WHERE: myinternet house > Level 8 > 14 Blackwood St > North Melbourne > > WHEN: 6:30pm > > Don't forget that you can come a little early to hone your hacky-sack > skills. ;) > > Cheers, > > Paul > > -- > Paul Fenwick | http://perltraining.com.au/ > Director of Training | Ph: +61 3 9354 6001 > Perl Training Australia | Fax: +61 3 9354 2681 > > > -- Scott Penrose Anthropomorphic Personification Expert http://search.cpan.org/search?author=SCOTT scott@cpan.org Dismaimer: While every attempt has been made to make sure that this email only contains zeros and ones, there has been no effort made to guarantee the quantity or the order. From pjf at perltraining.com.au Tue Sep 10 00:31:02 2002 From: pjf at perltraining.com.au (Paul Fenwick) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: Perl in the Age In-Reply-To: <62A8FE3B-C458-11D6-AB0F-003065B58CF8@dd.com.au> References: <62A8FE3B-C458-11D6-AB0F-003065B58CF8@dd.com.au> Message-ID: <20020910053102.GL29122@mukc.org.au> On Tue, Sep 10, 2002 at 10:58:14AM +1000, Scott Penrose wrote: > Hey Dudes, > > Paul and I feature (scarily) on page two of the IT Age today, > advertising the Melbourne Perl Mongers. > > Lots of stuff about camels, and a little bit about perl :-) all > together not bad, hopefully a little advocacy for our group. I hope > that our picture does not frighten them off, because DAMN we are scary. Hehe. I think people need to be able to find the group in order to be scared off. ;) I wonder how many people will spot the www.pm.org link in the bottom-left corner and look us up from there? For those people wanting to read the story on-line (without the scary photo): http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/09/08/1031115958729.html Cheers, Paul -- Paul Fenwick | http://perltraining.com.au/ Director of Training | Ph: +61 3 9354 6001 Perl Training Australia | Fax: +61 3 9354 2681 From mailing at espace-video.fr Sun Sep 15 06:41:22 2002 From: mailing at espace-video.fr (mailing@espace-video.fr) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:40 2004 Subject: ESPACE VIDEO FRANCE - Sites Officiels Message-ID: <200209151141.g8FBfMh19103@localhost.localdomain> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020915/9d0f47e1/attachment.htm From jens at cyber.com.au Sun Sep 15 20:16:02 2002 From: jens at cyber.com.au (Jens Porup) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Weather Forecast In-Reply-To: <200208172028.15783.gcross@alphalink.com.au> References: <200208172028.15783.gcross@alphalink.com.au> Message-ID: <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> Hi all. Given the fickle, strange weather we've had over the last several days, the following script might be of some use to you. With not enough work to keep me busy at the moment, I've been playing around with LWP and HTML::TokeParser, and I've come up with a utility script you can run as a cron job to deliver the Bureau of Meteorology weather forecast to you each day. If you're really mad about the weather, you could probably modify the script to check every hour for the time stamp so it updates you when the Bureau puts out a new bulletin, but frankly I'm not that keen on keeping up to date with BOM. Anyway, here it is. Any suggestions on coding style are, as always, most welcome. Cheers, Jens ----- #!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use HTML::TokeParser; use LWP 5.65; use Mail::Send; my $main_url = "http://www.bom.gov.au"; my $entry_point = "http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/vic/forecasts.shtml"; my $destination_webpage = undef; my $browser = LWP::UserAgent->new; my $response = $browser->get( $entry_point ); if ($response->is_success) { my $text = $response->content; my $link = HTML::TokeParser->new(\$text); #look for the link to the actual Melbourne Precis Forecast while (my $token = $link->get_tag("a")) { my $url = $token->[1]{href} || "-"; my $text = $link->get_trimmed_text("/a"); $destination_webpage = $url if ($text =~ m/Melbourne Precis Forecast/); } my $response = $browser->get( $main_url . $destination_webpage ); die "Can't get $destination_webpage -- ", $response->status_line unless $response->is_success; die "Hey, I was expecting HTML, not ", $response->content_type unless $response->content_type eq 'text/html'; my $webpage_contents = $response->content; my $weather_report = HTML::TokeParser->new( \$webpage_contents ); if ($weather_report->get_tag( "pre" )) { my $forecast = $weather_report->get_text; my $msg = new Mail::Send Subject=>"Today's Forecast", To=>'YourName@YourAddress.com.au', # cc=>'', ; my $fh = $msg->open; print $fh "$forecast"; $fh->close; } } From rickm at isite.net.au Sun Sep 15 20:50:41 2002 From: rickm at isite.net.au (Rick Measham) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Weather Forecast In-Reply-To: <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> References: <200208172028.15783.gcross@alphalink.com.au> <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> Message-ID: G'day Jens, The BOM's page titles are static despite the look of the URL. The precis forecast will always be at http://www.bom.gov.au/cgi-bin/wrap_fwo.pl?IDV10420.txt thus you could get rid of your first call to the index page. Their perl script merely reads a text file from their file server and wraps some HTML around it. 'IDV10420.txt' is the file that contains Melbourne's precis forecast. Cheers! Rick Measham #!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use HTML::TokeParser; use LWP 5.65; use Mail::Send; my $destination_webpage = q|http://www.bom.gov.au/cgi-bin/wrap_fwo.pl?IDV10420.txt|; my $browser = LWP::UserAgent->new; my $response = $browser->get( $destination_webpage ); die "Can't get $destination_webpage -- ", $response->status_line unless $response->is_success; die "Hey, I was expecting HTML, not ", $response->content_type unless $response->content_type eq 'text/html'; my $webpage_contents = $response->content; my $weather_report = HTML::TokeParser->new( \$webpage_contents ); if ($weather_report->get_tag( "pre" )) { my $forecast = $weather_report->get_text; my $msg = new Mail::Send Subject=>"Today's Forecast", To=>'YourName@YourAddress.com.au'; my $fh = $msg->open; print $fh "$forecast"; $fh->close; } -- -------------------------------------------------------- iSite Technology Consultants - Internet and PC Consulting - Software and Web development - Database design and administration -------------------------------------------------------- 5 Kay Court Yallambie 3085 http://www.isite.net.au (03) 9457 2045 -------------------------------------------------------- There are 10 kinds of people: those that understand binary, and those that don't. -------------------------------------------------------- From jens at cyber.com.au Sun Sep 15 21:00:13 2002 From: jens at cyber.com.au (Jens Porup) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Weather Forecast In-Reply-To: References: <200208172028.15783.gcross@alphalink.com.au> <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> Message-ID: <20020916020013.GF20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> Thanks for that, Rick. Someone here at work just poked me and showed me a much better way of doing this (with a three line shell script, no less. (ouch)). Anyway, the main point was to teach myself how to use LWP and HTML::TokeParser. which I did. So anyway... Cheers. Jens On Mon, Sep 16, 2002 at 11:50:41AM +1000, Rick Measham wrote: > G'day Jens, > > The BOM's page titles are static despite the look of the URL. The > precis forecast will always be at > http://www.bom.gov.au/cgi-bin/wrap_fwo.pl?IDV10420.txt thus you could > get rid of your first call to the index page. > > Their perl script merely reads a text file from their file server and > wraps some HTML around it. 'IDV10420.txt' is the file that contains > Melbourne's precis forecast. > > Cheers! > Rick Measham From tim.hunt at its.monash.edu.au Sun Sep 15 21:06:50 2002 From: tim.hunt at its.monash.edu.au (Tim Hunt) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Weather Forecast References: <200208172028.15783.gcross@alphalink.com.au> <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> <20020916020013.GF20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> Message-ID: <3D853CBA.9060300@its.monash.edu.au> And for those who like graphs, look at http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~rjh/melbourne/ T. Jens Porup wrote: > Thanks for that, Rick. > > Someone here at work just poked me and showed me a much better > way of doing this (with a three line shell script, no less. (ouch)). > > Anyway, the main point was to teach myself how to use LWP > and HTML::TokeParser. which I did. So anyway... > > Cheers. Jens > > > On Mon, Sep 16, 2002 at 11:50:41AM +1000, Rick Measham wrote: > >>G'day Jens, >> >>The BOM's page titles are static despite the look of the URL. The >>precis forecast will always be at >>http://www.bom.gov.au/cgi-bin/wrap_fwo.pl?IDV10420.txt thus you could >>get rid of your first call to the index page. >> >>Their perl script merely reads a text file from their file server and >>wraps some HTML around it. 'IDV10420.txt' is the file that contains >>Melbourne's precis forecast. >> >>Cheers! >>Rick Measham > > From agray at netconnect.com.au Sun Sep 15 22:10:04 2002 From: agray at netconnect.com.au (Andrew Gray) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: RH7.3 no suid scripts Message-ID: <070901c25d2e$8dd599e0$f135190a@netconnect.net.au> anyone know what I have to do to get SUID scripts to run on a standard RH 7.3 install .... new perl rpm doesnt support them at all :( regards Andrew Gray -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020916/9e57daa8/attachment.htm From cas at taz.net.au Sun Sep 15 23:02:32 2002 From: cas at taz.net.au (Craig Sanders) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Weather Forecast In-Reply-To: <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> References: <200208172028.15783.gcross@alphalink.com.au> <20020916011602.GB20127@vanilla.office.cyber.com.au> Message-ID: <20020916040232.GE1169@taz.net.au> On Mon, Sep 16, 2002 at 11:16:02AM +1000, Jens Porup wrote: > Given the fickle, strange weather we've had over the last several > days, the following script might be of some use to you. > > With not enough work to keep me busy at the moment, I've been playing > around with LWP and HTML::TokeParser, and I've come up with a both are excellent modules. i've used them for several web robot tools, including a script to fetch the weather (see below) and another script to search the melbourne trading post web site and present the results in a single page with simple html (IMO, much more useful than the bletcherous 10-results-per-page, click-next-to-continue, too-much-javascript-and-other-rubbish crap offered by the actual site). i'd post a copy of my trading post script but a) they change the page format often enough that the script needs to be updated regularly and b) i strongly suspect that if more people did what i'm doing, they'd do whatever it took to make it impossible....past discussions with them have highlighted the fact that usability of the site is not at all important to them. > Anyway, here it is. Any suggestions on coding style are, as always, > most welcome. neat. that's very similar to the script i wrote a few years ago: ---cut here--- #! /usr/bin/perl use strict ; use LWP::UserAgent; use HTML::TokeParser; # URLs my $base_url = "http://www.BoM.GOV.AU"; my $forecasts = "$base_url/weather/vic/forecasts.shtml"; my %URLs; #$ua->proxy('http', 'http://localhost:3128/'); #my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new(env_proxy => 1, keep_alive => 5); my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new(env_proxy => 0, keep_alive => 5); $ua->agent('Mozilla/4.76 [en] (X11; U; Linux 2.4.2 i686; Nav)'); my $request = HTTP::Request->new('GET', $forecasts); my $response = $ua->request($request); my $p = HTML::TokeParser->new(\$response->content); while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) { my $url = $token->[1]{href} || "-"; my $text = $p->get_trimmed_text("/a"); $URLs{$text} = "$base_url$url"; } my @forecasts = ( 'Melbourne Precis Forecast', 'Melbourne Forecast', 'State Forecast', 'Future Developments' ) ; foreach (@forecasts) { print $_,"\n", "-" x length($_), "\n"; my $request = HTTP::Request->new('GET', $URLs{$_}); my $response = $ua->request($request); my $p = HTML::TokeParser->new(\$response->content); $p->get_tag("pre"); my $txt = $p->get_text("/pre"); foreach (split(/\n/,$txt)) { s/^\s+$//; next if (/^IDV|^BUREAU OF METEOROLOGY|^VICTORIAN REGIONAL OFFICE|^P.O. Box 1636/); print $_,"\n"; } ; print "\n\n"; } ---cut here--- it sends its output (stripping some repetitive stuff i don't want to see 4+ times in each message) to stdout so that i can see the results on the command line and/or choose to mail it to myself or whatever. i much prefer writing tools so that they can be used in a pipeline. the script is called from cron like so: /usr/local/bin/getweather.pl | uniq | mail -s "weather report $DT" cas@taz.net.au craig -- craig sanders Fabricati Diem, PVNC. -- motto of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch From rendler at rendler.org Sun Sep 15 23:15:27 2002 From: rendler at rendler.org (Robert Rendler) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: RH7.3 no suid scripts In-Reply-To: <070901c25d2e$8dd599e0$f135190a@netconnect.net.au> References: <070901c25d2e$8dd599e0$f135190a@netconnect.net.au> Message-ID: <20020916141528.3d38535e.rendler@rendler.org> On Mon, 16 Sep 2002 13:10:04 +1000 "Andrew Gray" wrote: > anyone know what I have to do to get SUID scripts to run on a standard RH 7.3 > install .... new perl rpm doesnt support them at all :( You will have to install the ' perl-suidperl' RPM. -- vis tecum sit. From rendler at rendler.org Mon Sep 16 02:54:25 2002 From: rendler at rendler.org (Robert Rendler) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Stab in the dark with HTML::TreeBuilder Message-ID: <20020916175425.13265331.rendler@rendler.org> After being inspired by Jen's script using HTML::TokeParser and LWP I was inspired to knock this up today to learn HTML::TreeBuilder. The url for the article in which I was showed how some of the magic that this module could perform: http://www.samag.com/documents/s=1272/sam05030008/ -- print`$^Xdoc -qj`=~/"(.*)"/ -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: yahootv Type: application/octet-stream Size: 3831 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020916/8c2e876d/yahootv.obj From piers at ompa.net Mon Sep 16 14:46:01 2002 From: piers at ompa.net (Piers Harding) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: HTTP proxy with SSL Message-ID: <20020916204601.A6528@gnu> Hi guys, don't know if this is any use to anyone else, but I modified an orriginal work by Randal (from a webtechniques column) to beable to proxy SSL as well as port 80. I found it useful for debugging Headers - maybe someone else will too :-) http://www.piersharding.com/article.xml?proxy1 Cheers. From cgarnett at axelsons.no Tue Sep 17 04:24:56 2002 From: cgarnett at axelsons.no (Customer Support Group) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: $ave money on your long distance conference calls Message-ID: <00006c0c1467$00002c7b$00007010@mint.cern.ch> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020916/8deb7b13/attachment.htm From newsletters at the-financial-news.com Tue Sep 17 06:43:55 2002 From: newsletters at the-financial-news.com (The Financial News) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Development countries. News in brief Message-ID: The Financial News, September 2002 Production Mini-plants in mobile containers. Co-investment Program "...Science Network will supply to countries and developing regions the technology and the necessary support for the production in series of Mini-plants in mobile containers (40-foot). The Mini-plant system is designed in such a way that all the production machinery is fixed on the platform of the container, with all wiring, piping, and installation parts; that is to say, they are fully equipped... and the mini-plant is ready for production." More than 700 portable production systems: Bakeries, Steel Nails, Welding Electrodes, Tire Retreading, Reinforcement Bar Bending for Construction Framework, Sheeting for Roofing, Ceilings and Fa?ades, Plated Drums, Aluminum Buckets, Injected Polypropylene Housewares, Pressed Melamine Items (Glasses, Cups, Plates, Mugs, etc.), Mufflers, Construction Electrically Welded Mesh, Plastic Bags and Packaging, Mobile units of medical assistance, Sanitary Material, Hypodermic Syringes, Hemostatic Clamps, etc. Science Network has started a process of Co-investment for the installation of small Assembly plants to manufacture in series the Mini-plants of portable production on the site, region or country where they may be required. One of the most relevant features is the fact that these plants will be connected to the World Trade System (WTS) with access to more than 50 million raw materials, products and services and automatic transactions for world trade. Due to financial reasons, involving cost and social impact, the right thing to do is to set up assembly plants in the same countries and regions, using local resources (labor, some equipment, etc.) Science Network participates with 50% in the investment of each Assembly plant. For more information: Mini-plants in mobile containers By Steven P. Leibacher, The Financial News, Editor Mini-plantas de produccion en contenedores moviles. Programa de Co-inversion "...Science Network suministrara a paises y regiones en vias de desarrollo la tecnologia y el apoyo necesario para la fabricacion en serie de Mini-plantas de produccion en contenedores moviles (40-foot). El sistema de mini-plantas esta dise?ado de forma que todas las maquinas de produccion van instaladas fijas sobre la propia plataforma del contenedor, con el cableado, tuberias e instalaciones; es decir, completamente equipadas... y a partir de ese momento est?n listas para producir." Mas de 700 sistemas de produccion portatil: Panaderias, Producci?n de clavos de acero, Electrodos para soldadura, Recauchutado de neumaticos, Curvado de hierro para armaduras de construccion, Lamina perfilada para cubiertas, techos y cerramientos de fachada, Bidones de chapa, Cubos de aluminio, Menaje de polipropileno inyectado, Piezas de melamina prensada (vasos, platos, tazas, cafeteras, etc.) Silenciadores para vehiculos, Malla electrosoldada para la construccion, Bolsas y envases de plastico, Unidades moviles de asistencia medica, Material sanitario (jeringas hipodermicas, Pinzas hemostaticas, etc.) Science Network ha puesto en marcha un proceso de Co-inversion para la instalacion de peque?as Plantas ensambladoras para fabricar en serie las Mini-plantas de produccion portatil, en el lugar, region o pais que lo necesite. Una de las caracter?sticas relevantes es el hecho de que dichas plantas quedaran conectadas al Sistema del Comercio Mundial (WTS) con acceso a mas de 50 millones de mercancias, materia primas, productos, servicios y las operaciones automaticas de comercio internacional. Resulta obvio que por razones economicas, de costes y de impacto social, lo apropiado es instalar plantas ensambladoras en los mismos paises y regiones asi como utilizar los recursos locales (mano de obra, ciertos equipamientos, etc.) Science Network participa al 50% en la inversion de cada Planta ensambladora. Para recibir mas informacion: Mini-plantas de produccion en contenedores moviles Steven P. Leibacher, The Financial News, Editor ------------------------------------------------------------------------- If you received this in error or would like to be removed from our list, please return us indicating: remove or un-subscribe in 'subject' field, Thanks. Editor ? 2002 The Financial News. All rights reserved. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020917/69eb1162/attachment.htm From jzlin at bsk.utwente.nl Thu Sep 26 04:40:42 2002 From: jzlin at bsk.utwente.nl (Customer Support Group) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Generate Money Fast By Yourself Message-ID: <000040623afc$00005773$00001fc6@bsing.ing.unibs.it> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020925/06e9314f/attachment.htm From gcross at alphalink.com.au Wed Sep 25 19:22:28 2002 From: gcross at alphalink.com.au (Graeme Cross) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:41 2004 Subject: Fwd: Online script for When perl is not quite fast enough Message-ID: <20020926002228.670AC2FD1B@server3.fastmail.fm> Came across this today and thought others would find it interesting. On Wed, 25 Sep 2002 19:31:20 +0100, "Nicholas Clark" said: > The script for my talk on optimising perl is now online at > > http://www.ccl4.org/~nick/P/Fast_Enough/ > > > The slides are linked from it, but the script contains all the content > from the slides. > > Nicholas Clark > > PS if I've mailed Richard Foley, is that good enough to get it linked > from the YAPC::EU conference pages? > -- > Even better than the real thing: http://nms-cgi.sourceforge.net/ > -- Graeme Cross From sales at virtual-biz.net Mon Sep 9 14:08:12 2002 From: sales at virtual-biz.net (Easy Tax) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:42 2004 Subject: Save your company time and money Message-ID: <000075c12578$00000fb3$0000259c@ns1.virtual-biz.net> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020909/9ee7f37a/attachment.htm From sales at virtual-biz.net Tue Sep 17 06:27:01 2002 From: sales at virtual-biz.net (Easy Tax) Date: Wed Aug 4 00:02:43 2004 Subject: No More Searching for Exemption Certificates! Message-ID: <000011051cea$00006760$000035b3@ns1.virtual-biz.net> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.pm.org/archives/melbourne-pm/attachments/20020916/72496731/attachment.htm